China-US 'Execution Line' Comparison: The Economic Pressure and Survival Reality of the Middle Class
The article "China-US 'Kill Line' Comparison of Middle-Class Pressure and Survival Reality" discusses the concept of a "kill line" — an income threshold where middle-class families face severe financial strain due to loss of benefits and rising costs. Originating from Mike Green’s "140k poverty line" theory in the U.S., the idea went viral and was adapted in China.
Green argues that the U.S. official poverty line ($31,200 for a family of four) is outdated. When adjusted for modern costs like housing, healthcare, and childcare, the real "dignity threshold" is around $140,000. Middle-income earners are particularly vulnerable: as their income rises, they lose welfare benefits while facing high taxes and essential costs, effectively making them financially worse off than lower-income households receiving aid.
The article attributes rising costs to "Baumol’s Cost Disease": sectors like education and healthcare, which rely heavily on human labor, become more expensive without gains in efficiency, while automated sectors (e.g., manufacturing) drive down prices for goods. In the U.S., services like healthcare and childcare consume a growing share of income, creating a "kill line" effect.
In contrast, the author suggests China may not have a similar "kill line" due to different social and economic structures. Services are often undervalued, and welfare systems are less extensive, allowing living costs to remain low — but at the expense of service workers' conditions and dignity.
The piece concludes that while the U.S. middle class is "killed" by rising service costs and lost benefits, China’s challenge lies in the hidden social costs of suppressed service wages and intensity.
比推12/24 13:54