chitownsalesmen wrote:You'd be wrong. 70+ % Of americans live paycheck to paycheck, sure at first most people wouldn't even know how to spend NBA level game checks, but they will eventually get acclimated to that new salary and find new more expensive way to spend their new found wealth.
The problem is we don't teach kids about money, so even guys who make it to a literal 1-a-million situation like being a pro athlete a lot of times will still end up spending their whole check week after week. Look at Mike Tyson how many millions upon millions did he make over his career? He wound up broke too.
Hell, you chance of filling for bankruptcy is HIGHER if you win the lottery, the problem is societal wide its not limited to NBA players being especially bad with their money more so then any-other group of people. Hand-to-mouth, its the american way.
Being a former financial advisor, there are varying degrees of accuracy in these statements. Depending on the survey, Americans living paycheck to paycheck ranging from half of the workers making under $50,000 (according to Nielsen data) to 74 percent of all employees (per recent reports from both the American Payroll Association and the National Endowment for Financial Education).
A lot of it is not because of extraneous lifestyle spending. The average salary in the United States is $56,000, which is not a lot of money by 2020 standards. First, the cost of living and location are major factors -- $56,000 is good money in rural South Carolina, but it's poverty wages in New York City. The median home price in the United States is $200,000, but it's all over the place depending on where you live -- $200,000 could get you a four-bedroom, three-bathroom house with half an acre of land in Iowa but you're living in a crack house in Los Angeles.
In terms of NBA players, I can see the lower-paid players struggling financially. Someone like Golden State's Eric Paschall (salary: $898,310) is not making a lot of money living in the San Francisco/Oakland area. According to Zillow, the median asking price for a home in San Francisco is $1.3 million. That's not the price for a luxury mansion or an expansive estate — that's the price for the average home, including single-family houses and condos.
Conversely, someone like Charlotte's Devonte Graham (salary: $1.4 million) can live much more comfortably in an area where the average house is $275,000. Graham's salary is on par with what many executives make in the Charlotte area (think Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Duke Energy). Paschall's salary doesn't stretch nearly as far, especially when you start factoring in taxes and other living costs in one of the more expensive areas of the United States.
I agree that financial literacy should be more of an educational focus in the United States, particularly in retirement planning. I certainly cannot find pity for people such as Mike Tyson, who filed for bankruptcy after making $400 million in earnings because of spending lavishly. But we can't assume the 10th man on a team is burning through money or the soccer mom marketing coordinator making $50,000 is living large because she bought an SUV to take her kids to their games.