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sdcellar
Participantwow.
as long as this kind of property continues to fetch this kind of price, I’m even more resolute in my stubborness to stay out of this insanity.
I will agree that this place does need that second bathroom though, given there isn’t enough room to pee in your own backyard.
sdcellar
Participantwow.
as long as this kind of property continues to fetch this kind of price, I’m even more resolute in my stubborness to stay out of this insanity.
I will agree that this place does need that second bathroom though, given there isn’t enough room to pee in your own backyard.
sdcellar
Participantwow.
as long as this kind of property continues to fetch this kind of price, I’m even more resolute in my stubborness to stay out of this insanity.
I will agree that this place does need that second bathroom though, given there isn’t enough room to pee in your own backyard.
sdcellar
Participantwow.
as long as this kind of property continues to fetch this kind of price, I’m even more resolute in my stubborness to stay out of this insanity.
I will agree that this place does need that second bathroom though, given there isn’t enough room to pee in your own backyard.
sdcellar
Participantwow.
as long as this kind of property continues to fetch this kind of price, I’m even more resolute in my stubborness to stay out of this insanity.
I will agree that this place does need that second bathroom though, given there isn’t enough room to pee in your own backyard.
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]sdcellar, my data my be skewed, but I got my data from http://profilewarehouse.sandag.org/. I took 92126 as a sample size. Look at the median house hold income in 2000 and in 2008, according to 92126 data, nominal income went from ~$60k/yr to $82k/yr. Adjusted for inflation though, it’s ~$61k/yr in 2008. I can easily give anecdotal of my own as well. However, since most of the people I know graduated college after 2000, fresh grad engineers were making around $45k 7 years ago. Now, those same people are averaging around $85k. So, it’s well above the 35% I stated. However, I know that as your career mature, the income increase will plateau and it’ll be just around inflation or a little bit more if you’re good at what you do.
Nurses got a much steeper salary raise compare to engineer over the last few years.[/quote]Yes, we discussed SANDAG the other day and that doesn’t help me since they don’t even agree with themselves.
…and some other segment has done worse than engineers. It does help me understand why so many nurses were buying investment properties. (as long as we’re going to keep rolling with the anecdotes)
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]sdcellar, my data my be skewed, but I got my data from http://profilewarehouse.sandag.org/. I took 92126 as a sample size. Look at the median house hold income in 2000 and in 2008, according to 92126 data, nominal income went from ~$60k/yr to $82k/yr. Adjusted for inflation though, it’s ~$61k/yr in 2008. I can easily give anecdotal of my own as well. However, since most of the people I know graduated college after 2000, fresh grad engineers were making around $45k 7 years ago. Now, those same people are averaging around $85k. So, it’s well above the 35% I stated. However, I know that as your career mature, the income increase will plateau and it’ll be just around inflation or a little bit more if you’re good at what you do.
Nurses got a much steeper salary raise compare to engineer over the last few years.[/quote]Yes, we discussed SANDAG the other day and that doesn’t help me since they don’t even agree with themselves.
…and some other segment has done worse than engineers. It does help me understand why so many nurses were buying investment properties. (as long as we’re going to keep rolling with the anecdotes)
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]sdcellar, my data my be skewed, but I got my data from http://profilewarehouse.sandag.org/. I took 92126 as a sample size. Look at the median house hold income in 2000 and in 2008, according to 92126 data, nominal income went from ~$60k/yr to $82k/yr. Adjusted for inflation though, it’s ~$61k/yr in 2008. I can easily give anecdotal of my own as well. However, since most of the people I know graduated college after 2000, fresh grad engineers were making around $45k 7 years ago. Now, those same people are averaging around $85k. So, it’s well above the 35% I stated. However, I know that as your career mature, the income increase will plateau and it’ll be just around inflation or a little bit more if you’re good at what you do.
Nurses got a much steeper salary raise compare to engineer over the last few years.[/quote]Yes, we discussed SANDAG the other day and that doesn’t help me since they don’t even agree with themselves.
…and some other segment has done worse than engineers. It does help me understand why so many nurses were buying investment properties. (as long as we’re going to keep rolling with the anecdotes)
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]sdcellar, my data my be skewed, but I got my data from http://profilewarehouse.sandag.org/. I took 92126 as a sample size. Look at the median house hold income in 2000 and in 2008, according to 92126 data, nominal income went from ~$60k/yr to $82k/yr. Adjusted for inflation though, it’s ~$61k/yr in 2008. I can easily give anecdotal of my own as well. However, since most of the people I know graduated college after 2000, fresh grad engineers were making around $45k 7 years ago. Now, those same people are averaging around $85k. So, it’s well above the 35% I stated. However, I know that as your career mature, the income increase will plateau and it’ll be just around inflation or a little bit more if you’re good at what you do.
Nurses got a much steeper salary raise compare to engineer over the last few years.[/quote]Yes, we discussed SANDAG the other day and that doesn’t help me since they don’t even agree with themselves.
…and some other segment has done worse than engineers. It does help me understand why so many nurses were buying investment properties. (as long as we’re going to keep rolling with the anecdotes)
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]sdcellar, my data my be skewed, but I got my data from http://profilewarehouse.sandag.org/. I took 92126 as a sample size. Look at the median house hold income in 2000 and in 2008, according to 92126 data, nominal income went from ~$60k/yr to $82k/yr. Adjusted for inflation though, it’s ~$61k/yr in 2008. I can easily give anecdotal of my own as well. However, since most of the people I know graduated college after 2000, fresh grad engineers were making around $45k 7 years ago. Now, those same people are averaging around $85k. So, it’s well above the 35% I stated. However, I know that as your career mature, the income increase will plateau and it’ll be just around inflation or a little bit more if you’re good at what you do.
Nurses got a much steeper salary raise compare to engineer over the last few years.[/quote]Yes, we discussed SANDAG the other day and that doesn’t help me since they don’t even agree with themselves.
…and some other segment has done worse than engineers. It does help me understand why so many nurses were buying investment properties. (as long as we’re going to keep rolling with the anecdotes)
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]In that case, then yes, that’s the only way I can think of that will make home price rise again (income inflation). In some surveys, some companies are starting to unfreeze pay increases.[/quote]On the anecdotal front, this is exactly along the lines I’m thinking. Many employers have instituted wage frees at one time or another in the last 9 nine years, and when they un-freeze them, they don’t usually make up the difference. Disclaimer: haven’t worked for a large employer, so my opinion is way out of its element there.
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]In that case, then yes, that’s the only way I can think of that will make home price rise again (income inflation). In some surveys, some companies are starting to unfreeze pay increases.[/quote]On the anecdotal front, this is exactly along the lines I’m thinking. Many employers have instituted wage frees at one time or another in the last 9 nine years, and when they un-freeze them, they don’t usually make up the difference. Disclaimer: haven’t worked for a large employer, so my opinion is way out of its element there.
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]In that case, then yes, that’s the only way I can think of that will make home price rise again (income inflation). In some surveys, some companies are starting to unfreeze pay increases.[/quote]On the anecdotal front, this is exactly along the lines I’m thinking. Many employers have instituted wage frees at one time or another in the last 9 nine years, and when they un-freeze them, they don’t usually make up the difference. Disclaimer: haven’t worked for a large employer, so my opinion is way out of its element there.
sdcellar
Participant[quote=AN]In that case, then yes, that’s the only way I can think of that will make home price rise again (income inflation). In some surveys, some companies are starting to unfreeze pay increases.[/quote]On the anecdotal front, this is exactly along the lines I’m thinking. Many employers have instituted wage frees at one time or another in the last 9 nine years, and when they un-freeze them, they don’t usually make up the difference. Disclaimer: haven’t worked for a large employer, so my opinion is way out of its element there.
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