I work as a programmer, focusing on building applications that are ultimately maps. So some sort of 21st century cartographer. It involves computers and some maths.
At the moment I earn the equivalent of US$47k. 12% of that is subtracted automatically to repay my $30k student loan. Then taxes get applied to the remainder. Unfortunately I don't actually earn US dollars.
On the side I've done small jobs, and have one contract with a government department that starts soon. They wanted someone to work on site, but they couldn't find anyone with the skills, so I said I'd do it if I could work from home, at night. I think that should be a few weeks' work at about NZ$20/hour, which is less than I earn in my day job, but nice to have on top. It's the most I've earned as a side scheme.
$7000 yearly expenses? What the ****. How is that even possible? I don't know about yearly expenses*, but every two weeks I manage to save about $80 into a government-supported retirement scheme which doubles as a savings vehicle for a first home deposit (my employer matches that $80 in addition to my normal income). I put $30 into a bank savings account, and I pay back $200 in interest-bearing debt (credit card gone, now just $1000 on the car... then $700 I owe my dad but he doesn't charge interest).
Once my debts are gone, especially my student loan, I'd feel comfortable. At the moment I feel barely above water, although on a stead upward trajectory. Mostly this is difficult because my partner is not working at the moment, and hasn't worked in over a year. That's what cancer can do. She's going to interviews now that she's better though, so once she gets a job as well, then I'll feel positively wealthy and will actually be able to make discretionary purchases. It probably doesn't help that I pay rent for a nicer house than I need, but that's only probably an extra $25 a week premium over what else is available in my town.
Excluding my student loan (which bears no interest and which I have no incentive to pay back faster than I have to), I have about $23k in net assets. I need about $40-50k for a solid home deposit though.
* Actually I do, I'm a massive nerd about personal finance and I could tell you all of these numbers to the exact cent. I've tracked every penny I've spent, earned, and paid in tax for about 16 consecutive months. I even wrote an extension to some personal finance software I was using that plotted handy graphs in a web browser.
Bookmarks