I think a big problem is people who upgrade income automatically upgrade their permanent income expenditure to go with it (by permanent I mean: they will take out more monthly direct debits; more permanent monthly expenditure etc.). There's no aspect of saving to most people; you spend the months income, you're broke for the next 4-5 days before pay day arrives, rinse and repeat.
This means that when downturns occur, we continuously have people in debt, losing homes, not being able to pay etc. When I snapped up a second job, I didn't raise my permanent income by exact amount my monthly income rose by. I instead raised it by a %. So when shit hits the fan & so on, I have a savings buffer to push me through the bad times.
I know families with 2-3 children all of a young age don't really fit into this and I respect that. But to be honest, a couple can live on 1-1.2 grand a month easily as permanent income. But the English way seems to be live on 100% of your salary as pure permanent income & that's that.
Not entirely related to the topic but I think it does criss-cross over into why we have a country full of a lot of people who suck at money (and no way directed to the OP by the way).
This means that when downturns occur, we continuously have people in debt, losing homes, not being able to pay etc. When I snapped up a second job, I didn't raise my permanent income by exact amount my monthly income rose by. I instead raised it by a %. So when shit hits the fan & so on, I have a savings buffer to push me through the bad times.
I know families with 2-3 children all of a young age don't really fit into this and I respect that. But to be honest, a couple can live on 1-1.2 grand a month easily as permanent income. But the English way seems to be live on 100% of your salary as pure permanent income & that's that.
Not entirely related to the topic but I think it does criss-cross over into why we have a country full of a lot of people who suck at money (and no way directed to the OP by the way).