High construction costs with rising building interest rates

  • Erstellt am 2025-05-02 19:20:23

MachsSelbst

2025-05-08 11:55:47
  • #1


If you believe that there will still be a pension in 2050 as we know it today.
 

HuppelHuppel

2025-05-08 12:46:43
  • #2


The woman does receive pension points for the child.
 

kbt09

2025-05-08 12:48:29
  • #3
WOW ... How many children is a woman supposed to have to earn enough pension credits? And in the case of a divorce, the man complains that he has to give up pension credits. No. So, what kind of attitude is that?
 

HuppelHuppel

2025-05-08 13:10:34
  • #4
You probably did not understand the context of the previous posts.
 

chand1986

2025-05-08 16:21:36
  • #5
The context was clear and obvious that the stress, when the woman works, does not just stick to her and how stupid that is for everyone. That’s what you meant too, right? Because she is basically forced into wage labor since the sole earner man can no longer afford a single-family house, which he supposedly could at some point in the past.

Disclaimer: My grandfather never could, as a well-paid hydraulic engineer at Thyssen, my parents together had 1.5 jobs and I actually bought the parental home, but I am also the first who could maintain it alone, although also the first academic in the family.

The whole story just isn’t true. It’s a fairy tale to refine something like the above by relativization into a fact that simply isn’t. The attitude towards women that runs alongside it isn’t surprising now, but it is telling.
 

Bierwächter

2025-05-09 07:07:04
  • #6
I would like to be the stay-at-home dad. However, I have the significantly higher salary of the two of us, and we rely on both full-time jobs anyway. Besides, my wife would not accept me being the stay-at-home dad just as I would not accept her being the housewife. Both work or none, that's how it is with us. If part-time, then both part-time. Luckily, we don't even have to worry about that.
 
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