This rapid rise in inequality has resulted in large percentage of workers increasingly struggling to advance. In 1950s, a manufacturing job was sufficient to feed a family of four, pay mortgage for a comfortable 3-bedroom house, put enough away for annual family vacations and have enough left over for other fun hobbies (including aviation, for some), all this on a single salary. While the manufacturing has largely gone abroad, similarly paid professional jobs of today are mostly inadequate, and dual income is needed for a family to achieve similar standard of living. And this is mostly a consequence of the disproportionate rise in income inequality, accelerated by that SEC decision from 1992.