somefeen wrote: » They need to teach more about money management in schools I reckon.
Wheeliebin30 wrote: » Mayne your should ask them not to spend 800 euro on their I phones while making the billionaires more billionairey.
893bet wrote: » If in Ireland and earning min wage you are close to, if not in the top 1%.
DivingDuck wrote: » This should be a compulsory subject given the same weight as Literacy and Maths. Budgeting, basic household maintenance, simple nutrition, etc. Everyone should know how to feed themselves, do a wash, forecast expenditure and the like. It's absolutely shocking that we don't consider these things to be worthwhile enough to teach to our children except via optional subjects that aren't sufficiently practical a lot of the time.
frozenfrozen wrote: » I must be a fooking magician. 70 quid a day on ****e, fools and their money...
Dohnjoe wrote: » Another myth. Cheaper property and cheaper education, apart from that just about every other metric was worse.
server down wrote: » Nonsense argument. The iPhone and other smart phones probably save money as people don’t need to buy music but instead stream it, buy a camera, buy dvds but instead Netflix (which is the price of a dvd per month), no need for alarm clocks, gps systems etc. That’s not where disposable income is going.
Dohnjoe wrote: » And maybe a little more emphasis on history and economics - to give people some actual perspective and avoid threads like this Growing up in the eighties it was rust-bucket cars, second hand clothes, crap roads, crap healthcare, no jobs, low quality food/goods on the shelves, smog, holidays always involved a ferry and a tent, getting a TV was a big deal, etc, etc.. but according to some it's "much harder" now
draiochtanois wrote: » You have no idea how much engineers in San Francisco make. Typically total compensation for an engineer (hardware or software) would start at $160,000 cash bonus of $20,000 - $50,000 and RSU (shares) of $100,000 over 4 years
somefeen wrote: » To be fair, I can do all that on a phone I bought for 150 two years ago. I think he means people that spend 800 or more a year on a new phone. That's hardly saving money.
After the Celtic Tiger building boom, the Irish government drove up the cost of constructing new housing with a slew of new building regulations, to the point where it now costs twice as much per square meter to build residential housing in Ireland as it does in Germany. The government also limited how much people can borrow on mortgages, with new restrictions designed to protect the banks
valoren wrote: » You get what you focus on. For example, I'm interested in watches. I browsed dedicated sites daily a few years ago. Guess what? I suddenly had a collection of watches as I was focused on it and spent money on watches I liked on those sites. I got what I focused on. I lost interest, stopped the daily visit and I haven't spent a cent on a watch since. That principle works in every interest and hobby. If you want to focus on increasing disposable income then you'd focus on making a budget. You'd watch you're outgoings carefully, you'd cut down on unnecessary bills, you curtail instant gratification and you'd then have more disposable income. But people don't do that obviously. They want disposable income anyway. As the older generations would say; you've got to cut your coat according to your cloth. Certain expenses can't be cut obviously but everything you spend your money on is subjective.
server down wrote: » It’s amazing all the mind contortions people have to go through to ignore the elephant in the room - rent. Maybe it’s because a lot of Dubliners don’t rent. Nothing you says there increases disposable or discretionary income. It just budgets it.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Based on the market People are renting out properties for those prices because people are taking them. People are selling properties for those prices because people are buying them
We spend a higher proportion of our income on rent/property - we also spend proportionately less elsewhere. e.g. when I was growing up, a luxury car was a rarity - now they are everywhere.
Despite spending relatively more on rent/property we are still better off than we were a generation or more ago.
valoren wrote: » So the OP's point is that their income should be higher than it is? Because it is only being kept and hoarded by the 1% to make themselves wealthier and they should instead just distribute it back....? So they can then spend the increase in income in M&S and can no longer scavenge like vermin in Aldi?
server down wrote: » There is literally no wisdom in just repeating free market mantras. People really don’t want to be paying the private rent they are paying but the alternative is homelessness.
That’s a contradiction.
hurler32 wrote: Looking at some of my younger colleagues and across industries generally it seems younger people starting out in Work have little to no disposable income.
thelad95 wrote: » This post had been deleted.
Permabear wrote: » This post has been deleted.
The government even pays towards them in some cases. They're of a much, much higher quality than what's built under the "too hard standards" set here.
whisky_galore wrote: » Parents were supposed to impart this, why aren't they doing that now? Plus all of the above is now easily found with the smartphone that almost everyone has in the palm of their hand, there really is no excuse.