A question for people in the US
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starting salary would be $50K... That's so depressing :( Still - my 4 bedroom house in Canberra cost me around $US 47K :D cheers, Chris Maunder
Wow Chris! The average over here is £100,000. For a 4 bed semi in the South East its more like £180,000. That's a few A$ I reckon. Andy Metcalfe - Sonardyne International Ltd
(andy.metcalfe@lineone.net)
http://www.resorg.co.uk"I used to be a medieval re-enactor, but I'm (nearly) alright now..."
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starting salary would be $50K... That's so depressing :( Still - my 4 bedroom house in Canberra cost me around $US 47K :D cheers, Chris Maunder
OK, Chris A bare tin shack with a metal roof, no windows and a bare dirt floor in Silicon Valley goes for $350,000 USD Just kidding, but in Southern California you have to pay $1 million USD for a single-family home that's not too particularly nice. Myself? I pay rent with three other people and don't drive -- suits me fine. Brian Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart "And that's the news from Lake Wobegon, where all the women are strong, the men are good-looking, and the children are above-average." - Garrison Keillor
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starting salary would be $50K... That's so depressing :( Still - my 4 bedroom house in Canberra cost me around $US 47K :D cheers, Chris Maunder
Gosh - Canberra prices are not so bad then. In Hobart my three bedroom home cost us the equivalant of US$35k. I'd have thought Canberra would be far above Hobart in land prices. Is there plenty of work in Canberra ? ( of course, my ex wife lives there, so maybe not... ) Christian #include "std_disclaimer.h" People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. The things that come to those who wait are usually the things left by those who got there first.
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Gosh - Canberra prices are not so bad then. In Hobart my three bedroom home cost us the equivalant of US$35k. I'd have thought Canberra would be far above Hobart in land prices. Is there plenty of work in Canberra ? ( of course, my ex wife lives there, so maybe not... ) Christian #include "std_disclaimer.h" People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. The things that come to those who wait are usually the things left by those who got there first.
Canberra prices have jumped a lot in the last 2 years (since I bought - well, got the bank to buy - my place). My 90K place is now worth maybe 160K (appreciation + endless nights and weekends renovating it. Two friends have recently bought and they paid over $280K for a nice house in a reasonable area. As to work - I'm not sure. Last I heard there was still tons. Most of it would, I guess, be outsourced govie work. cheers, Chris Maunder
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starting salary would be $50K... That's so depressing :( Still - my 4 bedroom house in Canberra cost me around $US 47K :D cheers, Chris Maunder
Comm'n people, it's not possible to purchase house for that kind of money in Australia. Minimum in Melbourne would be over 120K (australian, which is 60K US), for a ruin somewhere far away. More likely 200+K for a proper house, 30km from CBD. It goes to 400+K in inner suburbs.
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starting salary would be $50K... That's so depressing :( Still - my 4 bedroom house in Canberra cost me around $US 47K :D cheers, Chris Maunder
Just for purposes of comparison here in the states - in 1992 my wife and I bought a small (<1000 sq ft) 3 bedroom house in Heber City, Utah for ~70K, and sold it 7 years later for about twice that, moved to rural Indiana and bought a larger (~3000 sq ft) 5 bedroom house for ~160k. I thought that was a little high, but we loved the location and the house, so we did not argue too much.
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$20K/yr would be considered very low for a software engineer in the Boston/Cambridge area. I reckon the starting salary (BS in Computer Science, little experience) at a large company in this part of the world would be $50K+. The salary for a sharp junior engineer (same qualifications) at a start-up (early-stage, well-funded software shop) would be about $15K higher. But I'm stressing "sharp", since their requirements are more stringent. Decent 6 figure salaries are the norm for experienced start-up engineers, but the hours aren't fun and you don't have a life outside work. All said and done, I think it might be unfair to equate A$/US$. The cost of living greatly influences the bottom line. Today, you'd be hard pressed to find a 3 bedroom house for less than $400k in the suburbs closer to Boston. It might be different where you live. Also, a 3 week vacation is the norm where I work, yet most of my friends in Europe and Oz get 6 weeks or more a year. Interestingly, consumer electronics, cars and gasoline seem to be cheaper in the US than these places. /ravi "There is always one more bug..." http://www.ravib.com ravib@ravib.com
House prices here in sydney aren't much different if you ignore the fact that AU$1 = some scraping of US cents.... The place I'm in at the moment (renting, with 2 other people) is considered large for the area, but it's still a townhouse, 2 common walls, no yard etc. It goes up for auction in 2 days and is expected to get about $600k, we were paying $25k a year rent, it was about to jump to $30k but the owners decided to sell instead As it's being sold, we're moving further out from the CBD to a place worth $320k, a large (for Sydney) 3 bedroom villa (like a townhouse really) but it's getting closer to "the boonies" (I'm assuming only Aussies will understand that :) With regards to salary, I'm on a middle income of just under 50k, both my flatmates ate on higher. That's with 2 years experience and a comp sci degree. I came from Adelaide where the same job would pay about $40k To give some perspective to the rise in property values, 3 years ago our current place was valued at $300k less than it is now, my girlfriends parenty are selling their place they bought for $75k 15 years ago. It will fetch over $500k..... :eek: Senior Test Engineer GLI Australia www.gli.com.au
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yes, we have something similar. we call them "welfare mothers", as in Neil Young's song, "Welfare Mothers Make Better Lovers". -c ------------------------------ Smaller Animals Software, Inc. http://www.smalleranimals.com
Neil Young lyrics on the Code Project message board? What'll happen next? :eek: Keep on codin' in the free world. "das leid schlaft in der maschine" -Einstürzende Neubauten
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Wow Chris! The average over here is £100,000. For a 4 bed semi in the South East its more like £180,000. That's a few A$ I reckon. Andy Metcalfe - Sonardyne International Ltd
(andy.metcalfe@lineone.net)
http://www.resorg.co.uk"I used to be a medieval re-enactor, but I'm (nearly) alright now..."
yup - 6 years ago I bought my house in the south east - since then my salary has increased - and I still can't offered to buy a house bigger than the one i am in now in this area - And they wonder why we have a teacher/nurse/policeman/anybody who does a worthwhile job shortage Holy Handgrenade of Antioch instructions
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I was depressed again in filling out the survey to note that my earnings ( $44k give or take ), equates to just over $20k US. $20K Australian is probably what a factory worker or office junior makes and is enough for a house in the outer suburbs, a used car and a holiday up the coast every couple of years. The question is, what does $20K US get you, in terms of lifestyle ? Is it proportionate to our relative dollars, or not ? Christian #include "std_disclaimer.h" People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. The things that come to those who wait are usually the things left by those who got there first.
Besides home prices, you probably will want to consider other expenses like medical, utilities, etc. which vary greatly between the different states here in the US. Here is an interesting link which contains a US map which compares the average electric bill in each state: http://www.msnbc.com/news/587983.asp?pne=msn
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Neil Young lyrics on the Code Project message board? What'll happen next? :eek: Keep on codin' in the free world. "das leid schlaft in der maschine" -Einstürzende Neubauten
And .. This Code's for you ;) Chris
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Besides home prices, you probably will want to consider other expenses like medical, utilities, etc. which vary greatly between the different states here in the US. Here is an interesting link which contains a US map which compares the average electric bill in each state: http://www.msnbc.com/news/587983.asp?pne=msn