
HeckZane
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I'm not telling you, but it's quite enough for our family needs thanks |
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Jenny O
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22.000 a year, and I still run out mid month. |
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ileerchina
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most of the chinese people here earn $3000/YEAR.compare to you,you can see how cheap things in china is.
to by goods and sell in your country you can easily earn some extra money.
http://photo.163.com/photos/zcwm012/ |
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golden rider
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23,000 before taxes and it's never enough. |
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dino
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20k. more than enough |
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DF
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£112,598, nowhere near enough |
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mikail brown
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i do not earn any thing but find the more we have the more we spend and the more we want to earn more |
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jacqueline e
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£32k per year, yes is enough |
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jackie m
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£10500 per year, single and poor. |
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Wendy B
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$2600 a month. We just barely pay our bills. |
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abluebobcat
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Before tax and social, I earn £92 a day for 7 hours work.
Yes it is enough as I am living rent free. |
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buff1ne
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£14,695.
No its not enough because Im a single parent and Ive got debts (council tax arrears) and its always finished the week after pay day when Ive paid everything through direct debit! |
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girl-in-love
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i get €1600 a month which roughly works out at €19,000.. so for a first job its plenty and i also have a loan out which i repay at €500 a month and it still leaves me loads of money to buy clothes or go out with my friends...
but saying that... i wont stop doing the lotto just yet hee hee :) |
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QueenBee
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£37k a year (joint) - it's plenty. There is the danger of, the more you earn, the more you spend so it's easier to run out of cash. I've always resolved though, even when I was only earning £6k a year, that I keep £? in savings as a back-up in case of emergencies, and that if we can't afford it outright, by saving up for it, or using a 0% finance option, then we don't buy it! Helps keep us debt free, and so the only 'debts' we have or things we don't own outright is the actual house and the new suite that we've just had delivered! |
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