Paddydou
Well-Known Member
A salary of £14,400 is the minimum a single person needs for an acceptable standard of living, according to research by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF).
That includes not only basics like food and housing, but also the essentials needed to "participate fully in society", the charity says.
That means spending on mobile phones, internet access and socialising is included.
It puts earners above the official government poverty threshold and is also significantly higher than the amount you would expect to earn on the minimum wage (£5.80 an hour).
Mmmm Ok - so lets base this on a salary of £19k per year. Well above what they say is enough so we have lots of lea way you would think...
If you earn £19k pa you will take home £1235 per month.
In my area;
Rent for a very small house or flat £750pm (this is very very cheap and based on renting from the local council - usual rent for something a little nicer and you are looking at over £1k pm, for a 3 bed semi think around £1500pm as average but you can be looking to pay anything up to £2k pm to rent privately)
Council Tax for said small property £100pm
Electric to heat and power said small property £150
Food/ cleaning goods for the month £150 (thats just under £35 per week)
That leaves you £85 for the rest of the month to power a car if you need one to get to work or catch the bus, to purchase clothes so you do not look like Hans Christian Andersons Emperor, pay emergency bills such as the oven breaking or fridge giving up the ghost, pay for your "active social life" ho hum would love to know what the JR foundation are doing in their spare time! I haven't included their version of essentials such as mobile phones nor even a landline or TV licence... Buggar I also forgot water rates thats pretty essential so that takes you down to £60 per month...
Come on when will our "offical reporters" get a grip and live in the real world?
That includes not only basics like food and housing, but also the essentials needed to "participate fully in society", the charity says.
That means spending on mobile phones, internet access and socialising is included.
It puts earners above the official government poverty threshold and is also significantly higher than the amount you would expect to earn on the minimum wage (£5.80 an hour).
Mmmm Ok - so lets base this on a salary of £19k per year. Well above what they say is enough so we have lots of lea way you would think...
If you earn £19k pa you will take home £1235 per month.
In my area;
Rent for a very small house or flat £750pm (this is very very cheap and based on renting from the local council - usual rent for something a little nicer and you are looking at over £1k pm, for a 3 bed semi think around £1500pm as average but you can be looking to pay anything up to £2k pm to rent privately)
Council Tax for said small property £100pm
Electric to heat and power said small property £150
Food/ cleaning goods for the month £150 (thats just under £35 per week)
That leaves you £85 for the rest of the month to power a car if you need one to get to work or catch the bus, to purchase clothes so you do not look like Hans Christian Andersons Emperor, pay emergency bills such as the oven breaking or fridge giving up the ghost, pay for your "active social life" ho hum would love to know what the JR foundation are doing in their spare time! I haven't included their version of essentials such as mobile phones nor even a landline or TV licence... Buggar I also forgot water rates thats pretty essential so that takes you down to £60 per month...
Come on when will our "offical reporters" get a grip and live in the real world?