Nope. Are you not man enough to put it in print.
Never before has a generic forum signature been so apt.
Nope. Are you not man enough to put it in print.
Wow - what a loser you areNope. Are you not man enough to put it in print.
Man enough, hah!Nope. Are you not man enough to put it in print.
Course he's not, the absolute tit.Are you going to acknowledge the errors in your opening post?
Load of bollocks - predictive text doesn't actually do number digits .... quite understandably. It was you that typed that .... and made it up.Its 6% if you use predictive text
Don't forget that those who rent are paying the mortgages of those who buy-to-let. Mortgages go up, rents go up.In the UK about 6.8% of people have mortgages
As opposed to now after THIRTEEN rate rises ? You think an extra two months ( possible three rates rises ) will make a jot of difference ?Come back to me in a month or two.
Yup. All of this. You forgot one thing though: for the majority of their working lives, boomers' incomes not only grew, they became more equal, with fewer left behind, which also meant there was more socio-economic mobility. This has been singularly absent for the past 30+ years.It's more the case that YOUR generation has had it much EASIER than any previous generation before AND generations since.
* Free NHS dentistry and university education.
* Bullet-proof gold plated pensions.
* Affordable housing - except for 2 years between 1989 and 1991, mortgage payments as % of income have averaged under 25%. Since 2000, that figure has been between 28 and 50%, and could climb to 60%.
* That's just for people who can get on the ladder in the first place. Deposits have rocketed as house prices have massively outstripped wage inflation.
And now most boomers voted to leave the EU, and they vote Tory more than younger generation, and they are responsible for this having been in power for about 40 of the last 53 years.
Might that be those that do the work, for those that have retired (many of them early with big fat pensions)?Pretty obvious which age groups are getting utterly f***ed over, and which are absolutely loving this interest rate rise.
Or those renting from Housing Associations etc where the rent is inflation linked...I have no idea what percentage of the UK has a mortgage, but those who don't will probably pay rent. Rent which will almost certainly gone up because the landlord(person?) – who has a mortgage – needs to cover their costs.
But yeah – savings and that...
Oh no he isn't if he's near me - I've stopped one, I'll stop him if he stands in my area.Coming soon to a Tory council seat in Brighton near you.
That's because you have empathy with those in a potentially ruinous situation.I would rather I get naff all on my savings and people didn't lose their homes
Except, as widely reported everywhere for the last six months, banks aren't passing the base rate rises on to saversIn the UK about 6.8% of people have mortgages.
By comparison about 61% of people are savers, some of which may be hitting the breadline.
So any rise in income to this long forgotten majority is surely good news.