|

You Try
to Live on 500K in This Town
By Allen Salkin
The New York Times
February 8, 2009
PRIVATE school: $32,000 a
year per student.
Mortgage: $96,000 a year.
Co-op maintenance fee: $96,000 a year.
Nanny: $45,000 a year.
We are already at $269,000, and we haven’t even gotten to taxes yet.
Five hundred thousand
dollars — the amount
President Obama wants to set
as the top pay for banking executives whose firms accept government
bailout money — seems like a lot, and it is a lot. To many people in
many places, it is a princely sum to live on. But in the
neighborhoods of New York City and its suburban enclaves where
successful bankers live, half a million a year can go very fast.
"As hard as it is to
believe, bankers who are living on the Upper East Side making $2 or
$3 million a year have set up a life for themselves in which they
are also at zero at the end of the year with credit cards and
mortgage bills that are inescapable," said Holly Peterson, the
author of an Upper East Side novel of manners, "The Manny," and the
daughter of
Peter G. Peterson, a founder
of the equity firm the Blackstone Group. "Five hundred thousand
dollars means taking their kids out of private school and selling
their home in a fire sale."
Sure, the solution may seem
simple: move to Brooklyn or Hoboken, put the children in public
schools and buy a
MetroCard. But more than a
few of the New York-based financial executives who would have their
pay limited are men (and they are almost invariably men) whose
identities are entwined with living a certain way in a certain
neighborhood west of Third Avenue: a life of private schools, summer
houses and charity galas that only a seven-figure income can stretch
to cover.
Few are playing sad cellos
over the fate of such folk, especially since the collapse of the
institutions they run has yielded untold financial pain. But in New
York, where a new study from the Center for an Urban Future, a
nonprofit research group in Manhattan, estimates it takes $123,322
to enjoy the same middle-class life as someone earning $50,000 in
Houston, extricating oneself from steep bills can be difficult.
Therefore, even if it is
not for sympathy but for sport, consider the numbers.
The cold hard math can be
cruel.
Like those taxes. If a
person is married with two children, the weekly deductions on a
$500,000 salary are: federal taxes, $2,645;
Social Security, $596;
Medicare, $139; state taxes,
$682; and city, $372, bringing the weekly take-home to $5,180, or
about $269,000 a year, said Martin Cohen, a Manhattan accountant.
Now move to living
expenses.
Barbara Corcoran,
a real estate executive, said that most well-to-do families take at
least two vacations a year, a winter trip to the sun and a spring
trip to the ski slopes.
Total minimum cost:
$16,000.
A modest three-bedroom
apartment, she said, which was purchased for $1.5 million, not the
top of the market at all, carries a monthly mortgage of about $8,000
and a co-op maintenance fee of $8,000 a month. Total cost: $192,000.
A summer house in Southampton that cost $4 million, again not the
top of the market, carries annual mortgage payments of $240,000.
Many top executives have
cars and drivers. A chauffeur’s pay is between $75,000 and $125,000
a year, the higher end for former police officers who can double as
bodyguards, said a limousine driver who spoke anonymously because he
does not want to alienate his society customers.
"Some of them want their
drivers to have guns," the driver said. "You get a cop and you have
a driver." To garage that car is about $700 a month.
A personal trainer at $80
an hour three times a week comes to about $12,000 a year.
The work in the gym pays
off when one must don a formal gown for a charity gala. "Going to
those parties," said David Patrick Columbia, who is the editor of
the New York Social Diary (newyorksocialdiary.com),
"a woman can spend $10,000 or $15,000 on a dress. If she goes to
three or four of those a year, she’s not going to wear the same
dress."
Total cost for three gowns:
about $35,000
Not every bank executive
has school-age children, but for those who do, offspring can be
expensive. In addition to paying tuition, "You’re not going to get
through private school without tutoring a kid," said Sandy Bass, the
editor of Private School Insider, a newsletter that covers private
schools in the New York City area. One hour of tutoring once a week
is $125. "That’s the low end," she said. "The higher end is 150,
175." SAT tutors are about $250 an hour. Total cost for 30 weeks of
regular tutoring: $3,750.
Two children in private
school: $64,000.
Nanny: $45,000.
Ms. Bass, whose husband is
an accountant with many high-end clients, said she spends about $425
every 10 days on groceries for her family. Annual cost: about
$15,000.
More? Restaurants. Dry
cleaning. Each Brooks Brothers suit costs about $1,000. If you run a
bank, you can’t look like a slob.
The total costs here, which
do not include a lot of things, like kennels for the dog when the
family is away, summer camp, spas and other grooming for the human
members of the family, donations to charity, and frozen hot
chocolates at Serendipity, are $790,750, which would require about a
$1.6-million salary to compensate for taxes. Give or take a few
score thousand of dollars.
Does this money buy a chief
executive stockholders might prize, a well-to-do man with a certain
sureness of stride, something that might be lost if the executive
were crowding onto the PATH train every morning at Journal Square,
his newspaper splayed against the back of a stranger’s head?
The man would certainly not
feel like himself on that train, said
Candace Bushnell, the author
of "Sex and the City" and other books chronicling New York social
mores.
"People inherently
understand that if they are going to get ahead in whatever corporate
culture they are involved in, they need to take on the appurtenances
of what defines that culture," she said. "So if you are in a culture
where spending a lot of money is a sign of success, it’s like the
same thing that goes back to high school peer pressure. It’s about
fitting in."
By the way, the frozen hot
chocolate costs $8.50.
[Index
to Articles]
|