prove anything other than mortgages are more. i call your bluff.
taxis in london are the same price as up here. internet isnt more expensive to shop on. BT dont charge you more. care prices are very similar. supermarkets charge the same, as do national companies like Argos and M&S and beer is the same price, as is food.
the 1980s called and wants their argument back. its no longer the case.
PLUS: yes, the houses are more. but you can sell them and get that cash back. then either emigrate, move north, move west etc etc.
Most of that I agree with (living in Central London) but there are other costs that bump up the day to day costs of living in London. Not so much info on the SE, as I don't live there, so have no real opinion.
Think congestion charge for example - I turn left instead of right and bang, 8 quid please. Travel is generally expensive here, although personally I think the tube system is fantastic in London - then again, I don't have to travel in rush hour.
A night out in London will cost me 100 quid plus, it doesn't cost me anything like that when I go out in my home-town.
I can't think where I can drive locally for example where I don't have to pay for parking.
One thing that's often forgotten with high earners too, is that they often don't get fixed monthly salaries. In some respects cash flow can be more important, and make you feel wealthier, than not really having your payment schedule settled.
My life would be incredibly easier if I got paid say the 1st of every month, rather than on project delivery every 2-4 months for example. You take on risk and your rewards can increase dramatically, but of course you have that risk to mitigate.
It's like anything really - you experience something then you tend to have a slightly differing view of when not experienced in it. Personally, I think the 50% rate is nothing more than a comical bit of marketing to say to people 'look, we're cracking down on high earners', where as the truth of the matter is it's had little effect. Most people in that position can easily avoid it (not all of course), and often that avoidance can result in a drop in income for HMRCE, not an increase.
Getting paid gross too can make you appreciate what you're paying in tax/NI etc. as you receive all the money in the first place. Then in January & mid-year you have to send of chunks to HMRCE. When I was an employee I never used to bother looking at the tax bit simply because it didn't feel like 'my' or 'real' money, now I pay it after the fact, well it does feel like real money.
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