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By today's standards, The Simpsons' lifestyle is no longer attainable

  • A 1996 Simpsons episode revealed Homer Simpson was making $479.60 per week, or about $25,000 per year. Adjusted for inflation, that's about $42,000 in today's dollars, which is "about 60% of the 2019 median U.S. income," says Dani Alexis Ryskamp. "But salary aside, the world for someone like Homer Simpson is far less secure. Union membership, which protects wages and benefits for millions of workers in positions like Homer’s, dropped from 14.5 percent in 1996 to 10.3 percent today. With that decline came the loss of income security and many guaranteed benefits, including health insurance and pension plans. In 1993’s episode 'Last Exit to Springfield,' Lisa needs braces at the same time that Homer’s dental plan evaporates. Unable to afford Lisa’s orthodontia without that insurance, Homer leads a strike. Mr. Burns, the boss, eventually capitulates to the union’s demand for dental coverage, resulting in shiny new braces for Lisa and one fewer financial headache for her parents. What would Homer have done today without the support of his union? The purchasing power of Homer’s paycheck, moreover, has shrunk dramatically. The median house costs 2.4 times what it did in the mid-’90s. Health-care expenses for one person are three times what they were 25 years ago. The median tuition for a four-year college is 1.8 times what it was then. In today’s world, Marge would have to get a job too. But even then, they would struggle. Inflation and stagnant wages have led to a rise in two-income households, but to an erosion of economic stability for the people who occupy them." ALSO: The Simpsons gives Comic Book Guy a back story.

    TOPICS: The Simpsons, FOX