Future construction cost development in the next 3-5 years

  • Erstellt am 2019-08-01 13:51:08

HilfeHilfe

2019-08-02 08:50:50
  • #1


yes, sure, but mostly the salary differences are immense and/or there is simply not enough work in rural areas.

well, I work for a corporation and at a medium-sized company I would earn about 30k / gross per year less in the same position. So commuting vs. salary.

I choose the salary or then living cheaply "in the countryside."
 

HilfeHilfe

2019-08-02 08:53:11
  • #2


Correct! And take Berlin, for example, where a lot of startups hired hordes of good young people as interns. That may work at first, but then they also want to start a family, buy real estate, or expand by renting, and the carousel starts turning.
 

guckuck2

2019-08-02 09:01:56
  • #3


"Several thousand" is just a drop in the ocean compared to the size of the city.
 

haydee

2019-08-02 09:11:11
  • #4
Living costs are lower in rural areas.
Commuting is also not exactly cheap. I know some people who drive 70/80 km one way daily. They didn't have less money during short-time work in 2008.

How much is left from the additional income then?

When I think about what a foreman earns here at the end of the world, outside the industry, and compare that with the engineer salary of my brother-in-law at the big corporation.
The difference in living costs between the big city and the middle of nowhere is not compensated.
 

Benutzer19

2019-08-02 09:18:16
  • #5
15 minutes in B, M or Hamburg is nothing at all... after that almost all city dwellers here commute. I live quite far outside one of these three and on average need 40 minutes, which I consider absolutely okay. Better than a tiny plot in the city.
 

HilfeHilfe

2019-08-02 09:40:50
  • #6


I commute by train, less stressful & cheaper.

I don't consider the time lost either because I "doze", chat online or read.

But yes, not everyone has good public transport connections.
 
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