Prompted by a suggestion on another thread I thought we could open up a discussion here on who has any mpney,and whether the austerity programme is having an effect.
In response to frances' (iom) suggestion that 20+ year olds have money to spend I wrote:
Teamsaint suggested a further discussion, see http://www.for3.org/forums/showthrea...062#post339062
In response to frances' (iom) suggestion that 20+ year olds have money to spend I wrote:
Are the 20+ really major spenders in the current economic climate? In a recent trip northwards I made a remark to a family member that there didn't seem to be much sign of austerity, and was promptly corrected. I think some people, which includes youmg, middle aged and older are having a hard time right now, while others are barely affected at all. Where the 20+ group may be different is in the seemingly unthinking way they might spend - instant gratification versus long term, but even suggesting that is probably a vast over generalisation.
In some market sectors I suspect older people are actually bigger spenders. A few years ago I read that the average age of a Porsche driver was around 55-57.
Many middle class families are smoothing things out, by older members passing money down to sons and daughters - for example:
Buying them cars
Buying them houses or flats, or putting deposits down
Paying tuition fees
Paying off student loans
Bailing them out ...
Etc.
There always was an element of this, but the scale of transfers is surely much higher now. I had to work to buy an old banger of a car when I was around 21 - but now it seems that often new ones are 18th birthday presents. OTOH I didn't have to pay student fees or repay student loans.
Another family member who is financially astute has sugested that the current student loan arrangements are actually roughly equivalent to a 9-10% "graduate" tax for those who pay their loans back. This is based on an observation that the current interest rates for student loans are sufficiently higher (no longer an obvious "almost free" money supply for the better off) than previous loans that many who start to pay their loans off (kicks in at around £21k salary) will very possibly only succeed in paying off interest for quite a while. Some will get highly paid jobs and pay off early, but many won't. In the meantime, young people who do not have the support of middle class families may have an even rougher time, and some talented young people will not even take the chance on "better" educational opportunities. In some cases this is a great shame.
In some market sectors I suspect older people are actually bigger spenders. A few years ago I read that the average age of a Porsche driver was around 55-57.
Many middle class families are smoothing things out, by older members passing money down to sons and daughters - for example:
Buying them cars
Buying them houses or flats, or putting deposits down
Paying tuition fees
Paying off student loans
Bailing them out ...
Etc.
There always was an element of this, but the scale of transfers is surely much higher now. I had to work to buy an old banger of a car when I was around 21 - but now it seems that often new ones are 18th birthday presents. OTOH I didn't have to pay student fees or repay student loans.
Another family member who is financially astute has sugested that the current student loan arrangements are actually roughly equivalent to a 9-10% "graduate" tax for those who pay their loans back. This is based on an observation that the current interest rates for student loans are sufficiently higher (no longer an obvious "almost free" money supply for the better off) than previous loans that many who start to pay their loans off (kicks in at around £21k salary) will very possibly only succeed in paying off interest for quite a while. Some will get highly paid jobs and pay off early, but many won't. In the meantime, young people who do not have the support of middle class families may have an even rougher time, and some talented young people will not even take the chance on "better" educational opportunities. In some cases this is a great shame.
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