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This might be interesting when comparing the generations:
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Does anyone know the best method to adjust each data point for inflation or any other changes that should be required? So if I look at that and see that in 1977 the average household had £2,500 per year of disposable income, what could that get you compared to today? Or another way of phrasing that is, did people in 1977 have more cash to spend on luxuries than we have today?
One reason I'm asking is, because I am seeing people say on this thread that they have had a comfortable life and young people today have it hard. But I am just not seeing that. I saw my parents generation struggle while young people today spend a fortune on all sorts of contracts and subscriptions.
While the equivalent did not exist in the late 70s, if you adjust what people spend on broadband, mobile phone (replacing handsets every couple of years), Spotify, one or two TV & Film streaming contracts, gym memberships etc etc, then look at what is spent on take-away and eating out (which was not really as much of a thing), I am seeing the current moaning generation having all these luxuries every month that my parents did not spend similarly adjusted amounts on. They couldn't afford to.
My perception is that those claims are bollocks, other people's claims are the opposite. So can the stats shed any light on the reality.
So you want discounts for OAPs and other people struggling? Like those on universal credit?