Kompany Car
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 19 Sep 2015
- Messages
- 4,411
The fact that isn't a fact. As much as I'm loathed to use AI when responding on here, I thought maybe he's got a point lets put the following prompt into the posh version of Gemini...You’ll never be able to convince them because all they hear is you think they had it easy while they remember the sacrifices that they made. So there excuse is that you think it should be easy and that you are unwilling to make sacrifices. The very basic fact that virtually everything is far more expensive in relation to median income is lost on them.
"Could you produce a detailed list of typical consumer purchases, eg cars, food, clothes, electronic goods, public transport, entertainment, energy etc. Comparing the price in the UK as a percentage of median full time income. The analysis should be presented in a concise manner and in tabular form. The two reference point years should be 2026 and 1986."
This was the output...
From the Office for National Statistics (ONS) data:
- 1986 UK Median Full-Time Annual Income: ~£8,300 (based on a full-time median of ~£159.60 per week)
- 2026 UK Median Full-Time Annual Income: ~£39,039
Using these figures, here is how the relative costs look when compared purely against full-time earnings.
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Food is quite surprising, if you run the numbers you actually find that the raw essentials are much cheaper today than they were in the 1980s in real terms.
Many of the things people think are expensive are actually no more expensive or cheaper, with a minor exception when it comes to public transport.
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