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It all comes down to more opportunities and it isn't just Sydney / Melbourne...Thats it. Regional areas are mostly only good for farmers or miners.
It all comes down to more opportunities and it isn't just Sydney / Melbourne...
One example - an employee from a Gold Coast car parts outlet was suspended from work because he forcibly recovered a part from some womans' pram that she stole from the shop.
The next day he got the same job from a competitor employer. It's that kind of income security you need to pay the bills so that's why so many people work in these areas.
Where I live in Sydney I can walk to everything I need including a hospital, medical centre, 3 forms of public transport, Supermarket, 24/7 groceries, Officeworks... the whole shebang. Can ever score a quickie in the mall at will
More to the point though, I have thousands of people in my network because I've worked with so many people in the factories (do a google view of Eastern Creek and then double the number of factories because they are going up quicker than you can say "gimme a job ya poor rich fat skinny bastard"
When I bought this place during the last year of the Howard govt the housing market was relatively "unaffordable" and made worse with increasing interest rates just like it is now. It didn't take long before I needed an income boost. One phone call and a month later I had a second job and happy days.
Even in the late 80's it was the same. If you wanna work you go to the big smoke but it'll cost ya.
It will never change unless maybe we kick the pollies and public servants out of Canberra and force them on a roadshow where they setup in the sticks for a few years and then buzz off somewhere else.
Why not? It's just a bloody circus anyways
The wife and I moved about quite a bit, her father was a teacher, so as a child she lived in a lot of small country towns, including Denham and the Cocos Islands 60 years ago.It's also about circles of acquaintances. Unless you have friends n the bush sticking with the people you know is attractive.
Most people don't tend to move far from where they grew up, went to school and where their friends are.
Regional people are a fairly insular group, the old story that you have to be in an area for 20 years before you 'belong' there is not just a myth.
The wife and I moved about quite a bit, her father was a teacher, so as a child she lived in a lot of small country towns, including Denham and the Cocos Islands 60 years ago.
I came here as a kid and the old man moved to the mining towns when they opened up in the late 1960's, since we have been married we have moved seven times, with a load of kids in tow. ?
Only 7?The wife and I moved about quite a bit, her father was a teacher, so as a child she lived in a lot of small country towns, including Denham and the Cocos Islands 60 years ago.
I came here as a kid and the old man moved to the mining towns when they opened up in the late 1960's, since we have been married we have moved seven times, with a load of kids in tow. ?
Yes I was lucky I scored my dream job in my 30's, I was certainly sick of moving house with four kids by then.[
Only 7?
Jeez, you have a bit of catching up to do
Back in the 60's and 70's in the mining towns in my early teens, it was interesting, I would get into a lot of fights because I was a pommie bar$tard. The upside was the girls found my accent nice, so I did o.k with them, but that led to a lot more fights with the guys.And how did you find settling into new places ?
Agree that the response was far from ideal in all sorts of ways.But this is about the response to a crisis as distinct from its cause or nature.
In my lifetime I cannot think of more measures from government at both levels that were as fiscally damaging, socially disruptive, and closed international and domestic borders.
Pick any industry that sells something directly to the general public. Anything from private schools to fast food.(Is it Morrisons genius? He was a marketing guy.)
I dunno... how about "PM disliked by only 36% of voters"I'm not sure that headline is well presented. You would think the editor would seperate the articles a bit.
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What's the concenus wrt the ASX200 one who wins? If LNP wins, a bit of "lead in the pencil" for the ASX200, a drop if Labor wins? A drop if minority Government?
I've got 100k on the ASX200 going south, so I'm hoping the Greens or Pauline Hanson get inNot much change either way probably. The market finds its own level.
Might drop a bit if hung Parliament due to uncertainty but overseas factors will likely dominate.
I'm sticking with the prediction I made a month ago..
1.5% swing to Labor. Coalition 73 and Labor 72 seats. Rest-of-the-World 6 seats. Hung parliament.
It's worth noting the Coalition historically do well with postal votes and they are nearly twice as high as they were in 2019.
No reaction in the ASX apart from world markets which will probably be steady on Monday.
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