Your maths is a little out Im sorry to say.
$20 x 40hrs/week x 52 weeks a year is only $41.6K.
Thats a big difference to $50K/yr.
That example in itself highlights that not everyone earns the "average" income.
Anyway..back to housing, we'll just keep saving
Hard work will get us there
And for the normal 38 hour week:Your maths is a little out Im sorry to say.
$20 x 40hrs/week x 52 weeks a year is only $41.6K.
Thats a big difference to $50K/yr.
That example in itself highlights that not everyone earns the "average" income.
Anyway..back to housing, we'll just keep saving
Hard work will get us there
“If prices remain the same for eight years, after inflation and economic growth you would see that the real decline in price is 40 per cent,” says Rismark International economist Dr Matthew Hardman.
A TYPICAL home is worth a little over four times the average household's annual after-tax income, down from almost six times five years ago, Reserve Bank figures show.
Strong growth in incomes and a period of more sluggish median house price growth are working in the interests of would-be home buyers. "This is a dramatically better picture on Australia's housing affordability," the chief economist at UBS, Scott Haslem, said.
another little gem from today....
extract................
Treasury's growth forecasts drew support yesterday from Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens. He told a business breakfast in Sydney that Treasury's forecasts were almost identical to the bank's for the next two years, while beyond that, there had always been a period of above-average growth following previous recessions.
"I don't think it is crazily optimistic to expect that will occur at some stage," he said, adding that it was hard to be precise about the timing.
The Reserve Bank is increasingly confident that China's economy is recovering, with the March quarter displaying the strongest growth for nine months, although Mr Stevens said it was too early to tell how durable its recovery would be.
Mr Stevens said there was a chance Australia would stage a much speedier recovery than anyone was expecting
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25509893-601,00.html
Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide more unaffordable than New York!Affordability Improves: There are 87 “affordable” markets, all in the United States (77) and Canada (10). As in 2007, the “affordable markets” include the three markets above 5,000,000 population with the greatest demand, Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston. A number of additional major markets (markets with more than 1,000,000 residents) in the United States are “affordable,” while Winnipeg is Canada’s largest “affordable” market (Table ES-2).
“Severely Unaffordable” Markets Remain: The least affordable markets are generally in Australia, Canada’s province of British Columbia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and California (Table ES-3). However, many of these severely unaffordable markets have experienced steep price declines in the last year. Among the major markets, Vancouver is the least affordable, with a Median Multiple of 8.3, followed by Sydney (8.3), San Francisco (8.0), San Jose (7.2), Adelaide (7.1), Melbourne (7.1) New York (7.0) and London (6.9).
The RBA must be smoking weed if they honestly think we are currently at 4x...........and remember they stated AFTER TAX
Just to balance things up, here's the 5th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey: 2009 Ratings for Metropolitan Markets where the Sunshine Coast took out number 1 spot for the most Severely Unaffordable at 9.6x
Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide more unaffordable than New York!
cheers
So no, all the dole bludgers and minimum wage earning unskilled losers who may have been born and bred in area's like that in the past (and keep the average earnings stats low as well!) can't afford a "average" house for the area there anymore - no way, but nor should they expect to!
Wow. I'm one of them and I'll take that as a compliment.
My only advice to you is not to rent out a property. After all it's a people business.
So no, all the dole bludgers and minimum wage earning unskilled losers who may have been born and bred in area's like that in the past (and keep the average earnings stats low as well!) can't afford a "average" house
However, once uni was finished I started work at about the national average full time wage at 22 - so already benefiting from a good education. I set 3 goals for myself at that time. 1) was to do some significant world travel before I was 30, 2) was to be earning 3 x what was then the average wage within 5 years, and 3) was to buy a house and have it paid off before I was 30.
What an ignorant statement.
Not everyone is like you Beej.
Its people like you who are ignorant and insensitive to those who are'nt as well off as yourself.
Sure I admit if someone wants to bludge on the dole, then I have no sympathy for them either if they cant afford a house. But I know plenty of people who work their butts off in blue collar jobs and will never acheive what you have...and its not because they are lazy!
I now remember why I avoided this thread for so long, because it was so full of some well off nobs with their heads in the clouds as to how a large proportion of hard working Australians live.
Some of you have no idea about average wages...honestly.
hello,
good evening and hope everyone having a fine day
please just relax, its only debate and discussion with the money box crew getting all excited yesterday
having been away from the computer and when i logged on just now i have 378 pm's requesting those sites again, so here they are:
rpdata.com.au
apmpropertydata.com.au
thankyou
robots
Come on - people who work hard in blue collar jobs can earn a LOT more than the MINIMUM wage, which is what we are discussing, not the AVERAGE wage.... I am not deriding blue collar workers at all, far from it! (Many blue collar jobs require significant skills/training as well). All I am saying is if all you expect from life is a minimum wage for your whole life, well, you are consigning yourself to the bottom rungs of society, and property ownership is not common on those rungs.....it's a privilege not a right.
I would hope that my own experiences would potentially be a source of inspiration for others, rather than a source of jealousy or resentment. Ultimately it is a competitive game we are all in here called life.....
Cheers,
Beej
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