According to Our World In Data, the second-to-top decile's income/consumption threshold is $25.40 per day, or approx $9300 per year. In international dollars, whatever they are.
I'm not sure how that compares to the data here. It adjust for inflation and cost of living and so the $25 threshold doesn't compare directly to the U.S since we have higher cost of living compare to other countries.
According to Our World In Data, the second-to-top decile's income/consumption threshold is $25.40 per day, or approx $9300 per year. In international dollars, whatever they are.
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/threshold-income-or-consumption-for-each-decile
I'm not sure how that compares to the data here. It adjust for inflation and cost of living and so the $25 threshold doesn't compare directly to the U.S since we have higher cost of living compare to other countries.
I also think that the article I refer to does some form of normalizing when they talk about the top 10%. Either way, I wrote this over a year ago and it may provide some proper context for this: https://briefedbydata.substack.com/p/co2-emissions-are-an-inequality-problem