I think most people would be shocked (and dismayed) if everyone walked around with a virtual call-out above their head that displayed their net wealth. The vast majority of wealth signifiers out there are really debt signifiers. The data on car loans alone is really depressing.
Not sure where I first saw this, and wouldn't be surprised if this has been posted on this forum before:

As it relates to high cost of education, some people reject the idea that education must be oppressively expensive. It is possible to get an education for very little at community colleges and state colleges/universities. You can receive all the licenses and titles imaginable at those institutions.
Then again, there are those who "need" a "prestigious" education to "get ahead." There are even a people on this forum that hold education costs as the exception to their otherwise frugal mindset. They paid it for themselves and the will pay it for their kids. To each their own.
For my part, I'll be a millionaire here in a few months at 35 with exactly the education I described above (and no inheritance). The community college in my neighborhood charges $69 per credit hour and the public college I attended charges $180. Harvard charges more than $1,400 per credit hour. Our local "Harvard" charges more than $800. That means those schools are a 95% discount compared to Harvard the first two years and an 85% (ish) discount for final two years. That is Mustachian!
PS I was recruited to play sports in the Ivy league and at other "prestigious" colleges throughout the United States but there was no way I could afford it unless I took huge loans. You can imagine the recruiters' shock and various sales pitches about my unexpected choice to turn down the "Ivies" for a community college in a small town somewhere in flyover territory.
I took a single, 3 credit hour class at my local community college just a few years ago. $1000 for that single class, including all the fees. The local (formerly cheap) state college is currently $540/ch. It's absolutely insane how much the cost of college has risen in my state since 1990 when I graduated high school. I used to bolster my knowledge by taking cc classes here and there. I can no longer afford to do that. I need to be damn sure it's going to increase my income if I'm going to spend that kind of money after going back to that state college and getting a second degree which has done nothing for me.
An interesting phenomenon I've noticed, is that whenever there is a problem with something often financial, any efforts to mitigate the problem simply result in a brief reprieve, a shifting of the balance point generally to someone completely unrelated's benefit, and the same problem remaining, because ultimately trying to apply an advantage across the board to make a finite resource (ie # of jobs in top 10%, number of homes, amount of waterfront property) more accessible, merely changes the balance point. An advantage given blindly to everyone is no advantage at all.
School was expensive and out of reach for people, so they instituted a vast loan system so people had access to more money. Well now that everyone has access to $40k/yr of student loans, university can now charge that, because people have access to the money. Before people simply did not, so they couldn't charge those rates except for a tiny minority of people who had access to it. The main benefactor here seems to be universities who can now charge much higher tuition to much higher numbers of people, and the result is those top jobs which is the reason why people wanted to get a degree in the first place are no more accessible, the costs and debt load are considerably worse, and the universities and banks are laughing.
When an improvement is made in any system, there are two things that can happen. Either the quality can improve with a system the same size (make school more affordable to a fixed number of people), or the quality can remain the same while the system gets bigger (school remains unaffordable, but student population grows 3x). You see this play out over and over again.
A car lets you commute 10x as fast as biking. You could use that to shave 90% off your commute time, but invariably people have chosen to maintain the 30 minute commute, but live 10x as far away arguably being no better off.
Money given to poverty stricken areas could be used to improve their quality of life. Instead it seems to simply allow for populations to expand, while maintaining that cusp of survival lifestyle.
People had a hard time coming up with 20% down payment for a home, and banks were hesitant to risk their own money. So make a gov't backed system where they guarantee the loans, and allow people to buy with only 5% down. This hugely increases the number of ppl able to buy, causes prices to rise, benefits the banks and previous home owners who enjoy higher prices, more and bigger loans which are less risky, and the bar has simply been moved that 5% is as much of a road block now as 20% was 30 years ago.