Uncle C
Well-known member
that really boils down to an individuals definition of living.
If I got out for a meal and can only afford cheap £10 bottles of house wine, I would not regard myself as living!
I think that proves the point nicely.
that really boils down to an individuals definition of living.
If I got out for a meal and can only afford cheap £10 bottles of house wine, I would not regard myself as living!
well aren't you lucky you can get a mortgage.If you live in the south of England, have 2 kids, mortgage and you are the only earner £50k isn't that much
Then your partner should get a job.I suspect you could replace 50k with whatever figure amounts to 5k less than what you're earning and your statement would still be about as valid.
The fact is, £50k is not a massive amount of money if you are a single wage earner for a family of 5 and are paying a mortgage of, say, £1,500.
That's not really for you to say but I'll bite anyway - why should she? All I've said is that £50k isn't a massive amount of money.Then your partner should get a job.
They're massively underpaid.
sorry simster, It was the tone of the other poster that bothered me. Most of us under 40 have no chance of EVER, in our lifetimes being able to get a mortgage, at least in the south of England; even working in jobs requiring post graduate qualifications. Rent has gone up so much in the last four years that it's getting hard for my girlfriend and I to afford to rent a one bedroom flat in brighton. Obviously all these things are relative though so it's very hard to compare.That's not really for you to say but I'll bite anyway - why should she? All I've said is that £50k isn't a massive amount of money.
If we want the right people to be MPs we need to attract people from the business world, not have our country run by career politicians. In order to attract these people a salary of £80k+ is the minimum we would need to pay.
And it would be easy to finance without it costing the taxpayer a penny. There are currently 650 MPs. Reduce the number to 500 (more than adequate for a country our size). 650x£65k is about equal to 500x£85k.
Result: Better and more qualified people interested in becoming MPs; there are fewer of them to create mayhem in the House of Commons; no increase in cost.
sorry simster, It was the tone of the other poster that bothered me. Most of us under 40 have no chance of EVER, in our lifetimes being able to get a mortgage, at least in the south of England; even working in jobs requiring post graduate qualifications. Rent has gone up so much in the last four years that it's getting hard for my girlfriend and I to afford to rent a one bedroom flat in brighton. Obviously all these things are relative though so it's very hard to compare.
Well when you think some nobody of 20 at Arsenal called Carl Jenkinson is earning 32k a week (another thread) it does kind of show how little perspective there is in the world.
Do we really need 600+ MP's in a country our size ? Why not reduce this to a quarter and quadruple their pay then everyone is happy
Agreed.
I don't know about you but I would like the best minds in the UK running this country and at present, I would say, on the whole they are not. This is generally because the corporate world pays far far more.
How can we hope to persuade the brilliant young minds in this country to choose a career in politics, when those running the country are currently paid less than many directors of small-medium companies?
They are definitely underpaid. They run our country for ffs! It is a difficult, thankless job from which they can be kicked out of at any time. Anyone who thinks their job is easy is a moron.
That's not really for you to say but I'll bite anyway - why should she? All I've said is that £50k isn't a massive amount of money.
sorry simster, It was the tone of the other poster that bothered me. Most of us under 40 have no chance of EVER, in our lifetimes being able to get a mortgage, at least in the south of England; even working in jobs requiring post graduate qualifications. Rent has gone up so much in the last four years that it's getting hard for my girlfriend and I to afford to rent a one bedroom flat in brighton. Obviously all these things are relative though so it's very hard to compare.
And if MPs don't like their wages...they don't have to do the job...nobody forces them to do it...they knew the salary. £86k plus expenses and extra's seem fine by me.I would agree £65k is underpaid, the your average qualified, accountant lawyer etc would easily exceed that. If you wanna earn serious money you don't become an MP..
And if MPs don't like their wages...they don't have to do the job...nobody forces them to do it...they knew the salary. £86k plus expenses and extra's seem fine by me.
I think you are confusing me with someone else who is having a pop at MPs. Please re-read the context of my earlier posts.