Well - How much then?
#61
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Feb 2005
Location: Back in NZ & loving it - living in Orewa
Posts: 1,183
#62
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,454
Re: Well - How much then?
ahh...that's why I pay twice the advertised price...
Thanks for clearing that up (as I told the doctor a week later...boom boom!)
Last edited by Avid; May 23rd 2007 at 7:53 am.
#66
BE Forum Addict
Joined: May 2005
Location: Canberra, ACT
Posts: 1,222
Re: Well - How much then?
Careful Apple tree mat e ,
#68
BE Forum Addict
Joined: May 2005
Location: Canberra, ACT
Posts: 1,222
Re: Well - How much then?
Hear Te awamutu is the place to grow really good Apple tree's tho?
#69
Re: Well - How much then?
Apologies for assuming.
Dont want to get into this heated nasty thingee that goes on sometimes.
Should of had at least 100k but remortgaged so much just to live in this shite hole.
Put me in a shed in the back garden, as long as I am my children are happy then thats home.
kato33
Dont want to get into this heated nasty thingee that goes on sometimes.
Should of had at least 100k but remortgaged so much just to live in this shite hole.
Put me in a shed in the back garden, as long as I am my children are happy then thats home.
kato33
#70
BE Forum Addict
Joined: May 2005
Location: Canberra, ACT
Posts: 1,222
Re: Well - How much then?
Apologies for assuming.
Dont want to get into this heated nasty thingee that goes on sometimes.
Should of had at least 100k but remortgaged so much just to live in this shite hole.
Put me in a shed in the back garden, as long as I am my children are happy then thats home.
kato33
Dont want to get into this heated nasty thingee that goes on sometimes.
Should of had at least 100k but remortgaged so much just to live in this shite hole.
Put me in a shed in the back garden, as long as I am my children are happy then thats home.
kato33
The same house we bought for 50k gbp then (was $157k) is now at $350k. Yet salary has remained the same as it was in 2002. That has hit many people and the high dollar doesn't help people coming out now with their gbp.
#71
Forum Regular
Joined: Aug 2006
Location: Tauranga, Bay of Plenty
Posts: 117
Re: Well - How much then?
This isn't meant as a criticism at all but how would you fare if you had four kids to bring up on a reduced salary? My point being that it's mostly the families who find it hard to make ends meet.
BTW Did you ask why NZ is short of truck drivers? have they all left for better work overseas?
BTW Did you ask why NZ is short of truck drivers? have they all left for better work overseas?
I believe that at least some of the shortfall in the number of truck drivers is as a result of the poor invetsment in transport infrastructure. If the rail networks had been retained then the need for truck drivers would not be so great. If the roads were better then journey times would be reduced and there would be less need for truckers.
My point was that there are lots of opportunities for truckers here in NZ. The decision over whether you would rather do the job here or elsewhere in the world is entirely up to the individual.
#72
Re: Well - How much then?
We do have 4 children ... and 2 grandchildren. We did bring them up on a reduced salary. We seem to have fared pretty well despite all that. For us personally the decision to move to NZ was right for us at the time we decided to move. It will not suit everyone - each on to his or her own I think.
I believe that at least some of the shortfall in the number of truck drivers is as a result of the poor invetsment in transport infrastructure. If the rail networks had been retained then the need for truck drivers would not be so great. If the roads were better then journey times would be reduced and there would be less need for truckers.
My point was that there are lots of opportunities for truckers here in NZ. The decision over whether you would rather do the job here or elsewhere in the world is entirely up to the individual.
I believe that at least some of the shortfall in the number of truck drivers is as a result of the poor invetsment in transport infrastructure. If the rail networks had been retained then the need for truck drivers would not be so great. If the roads were better then journey times would be reduced and there would be less need for truckers.
My point was that there are lots of opportunities for truckers here in NZ. The decision over whether you would rather do the job here or elsewhere in the world is entirely up to the individual.
Sheeesh.....It would make me go mad but luckily the OH is a lot more laid back than me although even he cant stand it.
Give us scenery over tower blocks during our working hours and I know what I would pick.
We are coming over Paul, sod all the negatives, cannot be any worse for truckies than it is here.
#73
Re: Well - How much then?
On our recent reccie we found that in general things were roughly on a ratio 1:2 on price except for new cars and houses. What I mean by this is if a cinema ticket cost us $15 in the UK it would cost us £6.50 so roughly half. And this seemed to hold true for lots of things.
So we worked on the basis that in order to achieve a similar standard of living as we have at home I would need to achieve roughly double my salary in dollars. i.e. if I earned £45k here I'd have to earn $90k in NZ.
Like in the UK we will look at what we can afford to pay for a house and go find an area that we can afford to live in. I can't live in multi million pound houses in the UK so why should I expect to be able to in NZ. Equally I'll have to buy a second hand car rather than a new one, but that seems to be the norm, and looking at most sites there are alot of older low mileage cars that would be in budget and would do us just fine.
I received two job offers, if I had expected to achieve the same as or more than my salary in the UK then they would have to have paid me in excess of $300k on the exchange rate so lets be realistic about what the pay rates are tootsie. I did however achieve double the figure in $, so by my reckoning we will be on the same standard of living, with some things being cheaper for us and others being more expensive, but probably balancing out to be the same.
#75
Re: Well - How much then?
I started this thread and having read all the discussion maybe now is the time to step back in.
On our recent reccie we found that in general things were roughly on a ratio 1:2 on price except for new cars and houses. What I mean by this is if a cinema ticket cost us $15 in the UK it would cost us £6.50 so roughly half. And this seemed to hold true for lots of things.
So we worked on the basis that in order to achieve a similar standard of living as we have at home I would need to achieve roughly double my salary in dollars. i.e. if I earned £45k here I'd have to earn $90k in NZ.
Like in the UK we will look at what we can afford to pay for a house and go find an area that we can afford to live in. I can't live in multi million pound houses in the UK so why should I expect to be able to in NZ. Equally I'll have to buy a second hand car rather than a new one, but that seems to be the norm, and looking at most sites there are alot of older low mileage cars that would be in budget and would do us just fine.
I received two job offers, if I had expected to achieve the same as or more than my salary in the UK then they would have to have paid me in excess of $300k on the exchange rate so lets be realistic about what the pay rates are tootsie. I did however achieve double the figure in $, so by my reckoning we will be on the same standard of living, with some things being cheaper for us and others being more expensive, but probably balancing out to be the same.
On our recent reccie we found that in general things were roughly on a ratio 1:2 on price except for new cars and houses. What I mean by this is if a cinema ticket cost us $15 in the UK it would cost us £6.50 so roughly half. And this seemed to hold true for lots of things.
So we worked on the basis that in order to achieve a similar standard of living as we have at home I would need to achieve roughly double my salary in dollars. i.e. if I earned £45k here I'd have to earn $90k in NZ.
Like in the UK we will look at what we can afford to pay for a house and go find an area that we can afford to live in. I can't live in multi million pound houses in the UK so why should I expect to be able to in NZ. Equally I'll have to buy a second hand car rather than a new one, but that seems to be the norm, and looking at most sites there are alot of older low mileage cars that would be in budget and would do us just fine.
I received two job offers, if I had expected to achieve the same as or more than my salary in the UK then they would have to have paid me in excess of $300k on the exchange rate so lets be realistic about what the pay rates are tootsie. I did however achieve double the figure in $, so by my reckoning we will be on the same standard of living, with some things being cheaper for us and others being more expensive, but probably balancing out to be the same.
Kato33