- This topic has 155 replies, 14 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 2 months ago by
pemeliza.
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April 1, 2010 at 1:23 PM #535112April 1, 2010 at 2:14 PM #534181
1stimebuy
ParticipantMovie tickets, car prices, apartment rent, ski day pass, TV cable fees, gaming console… Basically everything except what’s made in China.
Double the price for a house from 1996 is quite possible in my opinion.
April 1, 2010 at 2:14 PM #5343121stimebuy
ParticipantMovie tickets, car prices, apartment rent, ski day pass, TV cable fees, gaming console… Basically everything except what’s made in China.
Double the price for a house from 1996 is quite possible in my opinion.
April 1, 2010 at 2:14 PM #5347691stimebuy
ParticipantMovie tickets, car prices, apartment rent, ski day pass, TV cable fees, gaming console… Basically everything except what’s made in China.
Double the price for a house from 1996 is quite possible in my opinion.
April 1, 2010 at 2:14 PM #5348661stimebuy
ParticipantMovie tickets, car prices, apartment rent, ski day pass, TV cable fees, gaming console… Basically everything except what’s made in China.
Double the price for a house from 1996 is quite possible in my opinion.
April 1, 2010 at 2:14 PM #5351321stimebuy
ParticipantMovie tickets, car prices, apartment rent, ski day pass, TV cable fees, gaming console… Basically everything except what’s made in China.
Double the price for a house from 1996 is quite possible in my opinion.
April 1, 2010 at 2:21 PM #534186DataAgent
Participant[quote=AN][quote=DataAgent][quote=AN]Today, fresh grad software engineer should expect between $53k-66k w/ the average/median around $60k.[/quote]
If they can find a job….[/quote]
I bet you fresh grad software engineer are more likely to find a job today than in 2001-2002, after the .com crash.[/quote]Yes, that’s probably true.
April 1, 2010 at 2:21 PM #534317DataAgent
Participant[quote=AN][quote=DataAgent][quote=AN]Today, fresh grad software engineer should expect between $53k-66k w/ the average/median around $60k.[/quote]
If they can find a job….[/quote]
I bet you fresh grad software engineer are more likely to find a job today than in 2001-2002, after the .com crash.[/quote]Yes, that’s probably true.
April 1, 2010 at 2:21 PM #534774DataAgent
Participant[quote=AN][quote=DataAgent][quote=AN]Today, fresh grad software engineer should expect between $53k-66k w/ the average/median around $60k.[/quote]
If they can find a job….[/quote]
I bet you fresh grad software engineer are more likely to find a job today than in 2001-2002, after the .com crash.[/quote]Yes, that’s probably true.
April 1, 2010 at 2:21 PM #534871DataAgent
Participant[quote=AN][quote=DataAgent][quote=AN]Today, fresh grad software engineer should expect between $53k-66k w/ the average/median around $60k.[/quote]
If they can find a job….[/quote]
I bet you fresh grad software engineer are more likely to find a job today than in 2001-2002, after the .com crash.[/quote]Yes, that’s probably true.
April 1, 2010 at 2:21 PM #535137DataAgent
Participant[quote=AN][quote=DataAgent][quote=AN]Today, fresh grad software engineer should expect between $53k-66k w/ the average/median around $60k.[/quote]
If they can find a job….[/quote]
I bet you fresh grad software engineer are more likely to find a job today than in 2001-2002, after the .com crash.[/quote]Yes, that’s probably true.
April 1, 2010 at 2:37 PM #534196(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=AN]I like charts Rich posted in his Bubble Primer: http://piggington.com/shambing_away_from_cheapness_but_still_milling_about_in_the_gene much better. I think interest plays a huge role.[/quote]
I don;t know why we are debating what incomes have done since 1996.
The analysis by Rich indicates that in terms of home price to income ratio, we are about 20% higher than in 1996, BUT interest rates are such that monthly costs for owning have recently been lower than they have been in at least 30 Years in San Diego.
The author in the original link should have published his work in crayon.
April 1, 2010 at 2:37 PM #534327(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=AN]I like charts Rich posted in his Bubble Primer: http://piggington.com/shambing_away_from_cheapness_but_still_milling_about_in_the_gene much better. I think interest plays a huge role.[/quote]
I don;t know why we are debating what incomes have done since 1996.
The analysis by Rich indicates that in terms of home price to income ratio, we are about 20% higher than in 1996, BUT interest rates are such that monthly costs for owning have recently been lower than they have been in at least 30 Years in San Diego.
The author in the original link should have published his work in crayon.
April 1, 2010 at 2:37 PM #534784(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=AN]I like charts Rich posted in his Bubble Primer: http://piggington.com/shambing_away_from_cheapness_but_still_milling_about_in_the_gene much better. I think interest plays a huge role.[/quote]
I don;t know why we are debating what incomes have done since 1996.
The analysis by Rich indicates that in terms of home price to income ratio, we are about 20% higher than in 1996, BUT interest rates are such that monthly costs for owning have recently been lower than they have been in at least 30 Years in San Diego.
The author in the original link should have published his work in crayon.
April 1, 2010 at 2:37 PM #534882(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=AN]I like charts Rich posted in his Bubble Primer: http://piggington.com/shambing_away_from_cheapness_but_still_milling_about_in_the_gene much better. I think interest plays a huge role.[/quote]
I don;t know why we are debating what incomes have done since 1996.
The analysis by Rich indicates that in terms of home price to income ratio, we are about 20% higher than in 1996, BUT interest rates are such that monthly costs for owning have recently been lower than they have been in at least 30 Years in San Diego.
The author in the original link should have published his work in crayon.
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