Well yes, you do seem to be typing an awful lot without providing any evidence.
Your evidence (glassdoor) isn't exactly accurate though is it?
Well yes, you do seem to be typing an awful lot without providing any evidence.
Your evidence (glassdoor) isn't exactly accurate though is it?
I haven't used glassdoor, are you confusing me with another poster?
Which area of the country was your friend in as even 4-5 years ago he'd need to be earning a very good wage and be further north somewhere to get a property that wasn't ex council or wasn't a bit shabby.
Well where is your evidence then?
I don't really see any value in replying to someone as rude as you to be honest.
Evidence of what? All I've asked is what area of the country as this thread is predominantly about wages in the south and in particularly London. I quickly used a mortgage calculator with some numbers above what I believe most McDonalds managers would be on and even with a nice deposit and little monthly outgoings you aren't going to be borrowing a great deal.
Your hideously large screenshot didn't answer my question. Which mortgage calculator did you use? Looks like it might be Halifax from the colours?
It also doesn't justify paying them well. It's not the companies problem if unfortunate personal circumstances force someone to take a low paid job.
We aren't talking a flat or apartment though are we? and my numbers were very generous, we also aren't talking about buying jointly, that obviously changes everything.
Yes there is help to buy and first start mortgages but they're not exactly ideal and leave many people worse off particularly if they need/want to move on in the short/mid term.
This all came from you saying you could be a manager at McDonalds within a few months and be earning loads more, their starting salaries today for managers range from £22000-25000 going off their very own website.
That's not at all bad for a starting salary considering you can work your way up to a manager position. Many graduate positions don't even pay that and saddle you with much more debt and time taken to earn the degree.
I've no argument against the salary itself, it's decent for a younger person without any qualifications, realistically though many aren't becoming a manager after working there for longer than a few months and £25000 a year even in somewhere like the North East with outgoings that are more likely above £500 a month does not allow you a home much different to a council house/ex council house or in a rundown area.
And just what type of property would you expect a young person with no qualifications to be able to afford?
The ones I've stated at the end of the paragraph you've quoted if we're talking an actual house and not a flat/apartment, that's why I asked where the person in your scenario lived as you said they bought a home with no help that wasn't a council house or rundown, it's all very vague really and not a lot to go off so maybe it was possible in his circumstances.
Not really some people didnt get the qualifications they needed, or some people have no options due to many reasons no reason they shouldnt be paid fairly. Theres many social factors that mean people even after education need to have jobs like this.
So no qualifications means you are stuck flipping burgers?
Was that where this is going?
Sorry but some jobs aren't worth £10 an hour in relation to what many others earn working in jobs with far more responsibilities.
I do think zero hours contracts need looking into as they may well be suitable for some but it seems certain that they are used by some large companies entirely to their own advantage.