Omnidragon
Devil
Nah I don't quite like the Melbourne Model. A lot of graduates in many industries now have comm/law degrees and they don't go into law. A law degree is just like this extra 'something' to make you more likely to be employed in the financial sector etc.
Btw I agree 100k is not poor. But I still don't think it's that comfortable.
If you earn 100k per year, after tax you can expect around 65-70k. Then you have expenses. Sounds good, but when I think of the nice houses in nice suburbs (I'm not even talking Double Bay/Toorak) at $1.2m or so, it'll take many years to pay that off. So in the meantime you won't really be driving that nice car or going on that many overseas holidays, because that'll really set you back.
Unless you start with a nice lump sum, interest will eat all your money for repayments so really it'll take many many years to pay your house off (5% interest at say 800k debt [assuming you have 400k equity] is 40k per year). You can always try to save more (eg save to 1m) before you buy that 1.2m house. But I'm sure by then that house is probably 3.6m.
Btw I agree 100k is not poor. But I still don't think it's that comfortable.
If you earn 100k per year, after tax you can expect around 65-70k. Then you have expenses. Sounds good, but when I think of the nice houses in nice suburbs (I'm not even talking Double Bay/Toorak) at $1.2m or so, it'll take many years to pay that off. So in the meantime you won't really be driving that nice car or going on that many overseas holidays, because that'll really set you back.
Unless you start with a nice lump sum, interest will eat all your money for repayments so really it'll take many many years to pay your house off (5% interest at say 800k debt [assuming you have 400k equity] is 40k per year). You can always try to save more (eg save to 1m) before you buy that 1.2m house. But I'm sure by then that house is probably 3.6m.