Societal Standard of Living

What is SSOL?

The Societal Standard of Living (SSOL) is an economic framework built on a single principle: any individual who works 2,000 hours in a year - 40 hours a week, 50 weeks, with 10 days unpaid - should be able to afford every basic necessity without relying on government assistance. Those 2,000 hours can come from one full-time job, two part-time jobs, gig work, or any combination. The standard is the same regardless of how the hours are assembled.

SSOL is not a fixed dollar amount set by legislators. It is a calculation - derived from the actual, publicly available cost of housing, food, healthcare, transportation, communication, and all required taxes in the geographic area where an employer operates. When costs rise, the wage rises with them. When costs fall, the wage falls too. The number is always grounded in what things actually cost, not in what a political process was able to agree on years ago.

Why SSOL Matters

The federal minimum wage has been $7.25 per hour since 2009. In that same period, the cost of housing, healthcare, and food has increased substantially in most of the country. The gap between what minimum-wage workers earn and what they need to live is not an accident - it is the predictable result of a system where wages are set through legislation that responds to political timing rather than economic reality.

SSOL changes the conversation. Instead of debating whether the minimum wage should be $12 or $15 or $17, SSOL asks a more fundamental question: what does it actually cost to live here? Whatever that number is, that is the floor. Workers who meet the 2,000-hour standard earn it. Employers who employ them pay it. The government neither subsidizes the gap nor decides the amount.

The core question SSOL answers: What is the minimum hourly wage at which a full-time worker in this location can afford every essential expense - housing, food, healthcare, transportation, communication, clothing, and taxes - without any government assistance?

Key Principles

SSOL vs. Traditional Minimum Wage

The traditional minimum wage is a number chosen through a legislative process and frozen until the next political opening. It is the same in rural Mississippi as it is in urban California. It does not respond to inflation, to housing shortages, or to healthcare cost spikes. When it finally does change, the change is delayed, negotiated, and compromised.

SSOL is the opposite. It is different in every market because costs are different in every market. It responds to price changes quarterly because prices change continuously. It is calculated from data rather than debated in committee. And it creates a mechanism that does not currently exist: a direct financial incentive for large employers to bring essential costs down.

Aspect SSOL Minimum Wage
Basis Actual local cost of living Legislative negotiation
Updates Quarterly, based on real price data Infrequent, often decades apart
Regional variation Calculated per employer location One national or state number
Government role Defines the calculation; no ongoing subsidy needed Sets the floor; often supplements with welfare
Employer transparency Full breakdown required Dollar amount only
Price incentive Employers benefit when essential costs drop No connection between wages and prices

SSOL vs. Universal Basic Income

SSOL is not Universal Basic Income. UBI is a government payment to all citizens regardless of whether they work. SSOL is a wage floor for workers - it applies only to those who reach 2,000 hours per year. The two can coexist: SSOL sets the floor for working, and a UBI derived from the SSOL methodology provides a baseline for those who cannot work. But they are separate tools serving different purposes, and SSOL does not require UBI to function.

The UBI and Safety Net page explores how the two systems can be integrated.

Where to Start

The site is organized to build the argument from the ground up. If you are new to SSOL, the recommended reading order is:

  1. Money - why wages are about what you can buy, not what they say on the check
  2. Inelastic Market - why essential goods require different economic thinking
  3. Supply and Demand - why market self-correction fails for necessities
  4. Inflation - why tying wages to actual costs is more stable than broad inflation indexes
  5. Rules - how SSOL is calculated and what makes it tamper-resistant
  6. Capitalism and SSOL - how SSOL works with market forces rather than against them

The FAQ addresses common questions and objections directly. The Calculator lets you experiment with the numbers for a hypothetical location.