This site has these sorts of stats for each state.

  • QualifiedKitten
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    281 year ago

    It’s late, so I could be making dumb mistakes here, but I think the numbers are at least loosely factoring in those sort of expenses. It’s not 100 hours/week just to cover rent, it’s 100 hours/week to actually maybe afford that rent.

    $7.25/hour x 40 hours/week x 4 weeks/month = $1160/month gross income
    Assuming a maximum of 1/3 of gross income goes to housing, that’s $383/month available for rent. The site calculates $377/month as “affordable rent” for the minimum wage worker, so for the sake of the argument, I think my calculations are close enough.
    So, that means for every hour worked, about $2.39 is going towards rent ($7.25x0.33).
    $2.39/hour x 106 hours/week x 4 weeks/month = $1013, which is just over their “1-Bedroom Fair Market Rent” rate of $1002/month.

    • @Sconrad122
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      111 months ago

      Pretty sure they are using 56/12=4.667 weeks per month and 0.3 ratio instead of a third, that makes the numbers line up for me

      • QualifiedKitten
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        211 months ago

        Yeah, my numbers were definitely very round, but if we are trying to get more exact, aren’t there only 52 weeks per year, so 4.33 weeks per month?

        • @Sconrad122
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          111 months ago

          Typo, 52 is what I meant. Good catch!