Are you not changing the definition of what those classes mean here?
Not really, if you recall, I said that I though I had initially posted my thoughts in a US Politics thread. The US traditionally has a different view of class than the UK being more about wealth and less about breeding - though the prevalence of inter-generational wealth (or poverty) means that there's a significant overlap.
In the past it was the vast majority of people grafting, a small mercantile/professional middle class and a tiny, largely inherited, upper class.
That's still pretty much the situation now in the UK IMO with the vast majority of people managing, barely managing or not managing at all, a much smaller number of people doing fairly nicely and the 1%ers doing very well indeed.
I think traditionally one meant something other than your income, or how much you had in the bank, by what class you were. There are plenty of examples of aristocrats losing everything,
...and at that point in time they, and certainly their descendants, were no longer upper class.
George Orwell was frequently on the point of starving through lack of funds, but can you ever really be working class if you went to Eton?
If not, it entirely removes the possibility of social mobility.
Thatcher was the daughter of a grocer, could she ever have been upper class?
In her own right ? Probably not.
Then again she married a multi-millionaire businessman and so whilst she may have been considered "arriviste" at a minimum she could be considered upper-middle class. IIRC Denis still had to work for a living
Churchill had to work. I think his brother had to go into banking to earn his keep. Were the Churchills middle class?
Depends on how far you get from the "main" line, but yes some of the Churchills might properly have been upper-middle class.
Your model would have lots of people starting their lives as working class, becoming middle class and then later in life becoming upper class purely on the basis of money. I'm really not sure that that is what class used to mean. My mother would have started in a middle class family, become working class when she started work before becoming middle class and then upper class.
You're right, there's an ugly transition period between being a dependant - in which case someone else is footing the bill and standing on your own two feet.
Then again, many of the people I went to university with and started working with came from upper-middle class families and though they may have briefly dipped to middle-class living standards their parents were often on hand to provide a financial safety net. Looking at my middle class friends' children who are in their 20s and early 30s, their parents have provided deposits for houses and flats or a new second hand car.
Regarding the idea of working through the classes over the course of a career, I'd argue that the likes of Alan Sugar have shown that it can be done but he's the exception rather than the rule. The idea that there are lots of people who started off as working class and have managed to get to the position that they and their families are living off the income generated by their wealth is IMO fanciful.
Levels of social and economic mobility are comparatively low in the UK (and are falling), and falling. Many of of our neighbours are our age or older and are what I would term middle class. Most are now retired and (usually he) had a professional or upper management job. They seem to have three typical back-stories
- Child of middle class parent lives middle-class life
- Second or third child of upper middle-class parents had to make more of their own way in life but was given a jolly good head start
- Child of working class parents made the most of the educational opportunities in the 60s, 70s and 80s to do well for themselves - a.k.a. grammar school boy makes good, regardless of whether they went to grammar school
OTOH most of the people we know and meet on a day-to-day basis through sport, music or just in the surrounding area are working class folk from a long line of working class folk. They work hard to provide for their families but haven't quite managed to have that slice of luck required to propel them into the middle class.