They saturated the market, there are only so many routes that need a plane like that.Airbus to stop making the A380. I’m trying to think how I can blame Brexit, but can only come up with wrong aircraft at the wrong time.
Over to you OG.
They saturated the market, there are only so many routes that need a plane like that.Airbus to stop making the A380. I’m trying to think how I can blame Brexit, but can only come up with wrong aircraft at the wrong time.
Over to you OG.
Yes, you did in the 1980s.ET call home.
In the area of London I just moved out of you need something like 12x annual average pay to buy a 'starter' house.
I think it’s the operating cost too. Something like a B747 or A380 typically costs £12K to handle at a major airport. A wide bodied twin jet costs about £2K, so the overheads are much less per passenger. Plus with 4 x engines the service cost is doubled on those items. The easing of rules allowing twins to fly over large stretches of water is what’s killing the A380 and B747 markets.They saturated the market, there are only so many routes that need a plane like that.
And only so many airports they can fly into.. dont ignore the ground infrastructure requiredThey saturated the market, there are only so many routes that need a plane like that.
I was, I bit off more than I could chew, over ambitious. Remember the financial downturn of the early 90's? Killed us.There is no shame in having the balls to give it a go. Not silly at all.
didn't go back far enough?That chart doesn’t go back far enough. The time span has been carefully selected to show a worst case period. Even it out over the period when interest rates where routinely over 10% and you will get a different story.
Amazing! at present it comes mainly from evertwhere elseThat ok, don’t worry. All of your stuff will still make it to our shores just as it does now.
There is a tactic used by the incompetent which relies on creating a problem which does not exist, and then loudly announcing a solution to the nonexistent problem. Everyone then thinks you are great, forward thinking and on the ball. That’s all that is happening with the shipping thing. The problem our government faces is that they are too incompetent to even pull off this incompetency covering stunt. It’s a bit pathetic really. But the bottom line is, all your crap & treasure will still make it to Hull.
Naturally the assumption is that the couple have some sort of job security....I completely reject the “young people can’t afford houses” rubbish. A mortgage on a starter home today, in any particular area, equates to roughly the same percentage of take home pay as it did decades ago. The mortgage on my first house just about wiped out all of my take home pay and we relied on my wife’s dental nurse’s weekly wage for food and heating.
The problem today is not the cost of things, it’s that young people want everything right now, new cars, exotic holidays, the latest household gadgets, new furniture, the list continues. They achieve this by taking on debt which in turn costs them even more in interest payments.
They are not prepared to go without, to plan and to save, steadily building their resources. Absolutely no sympathy for them, they need to crack-on and stop squeaking about house prices. It was the same for us.
We have "First Hull Trains" ( actually 4 trains notable for infrequently making it all the way to Kings Cross without a breakdown on the way)Don't you have a train line? Sending everything by ship is so 19th century...
Sounds like you identified where you went wrong and salvaged the positive elements of the experience. Not all bad.I was, I bit off more than I could chew, over ambitious. Remember the financial downturn of the early 90's? Killed us.
OK that experience did give me the credentials I needed to occupy management level jobs for others later. But there is something about being your own boss, liberty of thought and expression in the workplace is priceless...
Er.... No. I had a house there in the 80s. It was nowhere near that amount.Yes, you did in the 1980s.
HS2 has to go. And spend the money on the current network.We have "First Hull Trains" ( actually 4 trains notable for infrequently making it all the way to Kings Cross without a breakdown on the way)
The joys of Privatisation! Where else can you pay for a four hours train journey and get an additional five hours free relaxation on the train and a chance to gaze at the countryside?
Mind you that's better than Reese Mogg's estimate that Brexit will be beneficial in Fifty year's time.
50H is digging himself a massive hole here. Trouble is - he's got a narrative running in his head that says its down to the kids not working hard enough rather than house prices going through the roof over the last few decades (and digging up the facts about that is really not very hard).didn't go back far enough?
Here is one, starting just at the time we stopped renting and bought our first home.
The lower the rate, the higher the ratio house price versus income.
When interest goes back up again, we'll hit negative equity. Back in 1981, I did not even know what negative equity was.
Yup. I quit working for anybody else in my mid-30s and my god its nice not having project managers and busybody HR staff trying to tell you what to think.I was, I bit off more than I could chew, over ambitious. Remember the financial downturn of the early 90's? Killed us.
OK that experience did give me the credentials I needed to occupy management level jobs for others later. But there is something about being your own boss, liberty of thought and expression in the workplace is priceless...
did anyone watch 'the real marigold on Tour in Russia' last night?My local Hospital that also serves Clacton (exUKIP) >
Of these 270 worked at Colchester Hospital and most returned home to Italy, Spain and the Philippines with others departing to locations all over Europe and the rest of the world.
From the independent
"
Brexit: Government admits it has ‘run out of time’ to find ships to bring emergency supplies after no-deal
‘It would not be possible to compete procurement and make it operational for 29 March,’ senior Department for Transport official tells MPs
No. In 1979 when we purchased the house brand new was 18,000 my salary was 3k and my wifes 2 K . The only huge difference was that interest rates were close to 10% .Yes, you did in the 1980s.
Perhaps it's more aropriate to compare ourselves with other countries, in la spezia (depending on area) 120k euro can buy a large free standing 3 bedroom house. We speak as if thatcherism, deliberate creation of a housing bubble through deregulation etc etc) "fixing" it with ultra low interest rates that slaughter pension funds etc are coincidences - and not deliberate expressions of a quite corrupt cultureNo. In 1979 when we purchased the house brand new was 18,000 my salary was 3k and my wifes 2 K . The only huge difference was that interest rates were close to 10% .
Mind you ,and in partial agreement,with 50, there was wall paper a very primitive fitted kitchen,and no floor covering except concrete downstairs and blockboard mdf elsewhere.
We did discuss this some 18 months ago. EU and commonwealth medical staff were finding cold comfort in (even ) London at the time of the referendum ,and were resolving to go after their current contracts expired.My local Hospital that also serves Clacton (exUKIP) > Health bosses' plea to nurses: Don't leave after Brexit
HEALTH leaders in Colchester and Tendring have pleaded with European workers to stay in the United Kingdom for the sake of the NHS.
Nearly 300 non-British nurses have left Colchester Hospital since the Brexit referendum in June 2016.
Since the Brexit referendum in June 2016, a total of 480 non-British registered nurses have left.
Of these 270 worked at Colchester Hospital and most returned home to Italy, Spain and the Philippines with others departing to locations all over Europe and the rest of the world.