I would set the level of "threshold" fairly low, especially in the modern, industrialized world. That puts most people in many countries in a maximizing setting...In the US, for instance, an officially poor family on welfare living in public housing and getting food stamps--no car, no assets, no cash--is probably living above the threshold level. NOT living well, certainly.
That "sustaining themselves" has a variable threshold. A lot of people live paycheck-to-paycheck to maximize their utility.Yet, a significant portion of the population still exists in a threshold society, in that a significant portion of the population is living paycheck-to-paycheck, trying to reach the wealth threshold required to sustain themselves. — Bliss
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