Thursday 27 February 2014

Creative scaffold placement

We're having the outside of our house painted at the moment. I was impressed by this location Martin and Fraser (the painter) managed to get the scaffold into: actually interlocking the beams of the back porch.



Saturday 22 February 2014

Valentine's Day from This American Life

One of my favourite podcasts, This American Life, joined with the Google Doodle team to make a cool doodle for Valentine's Day.  It only showed up on US browsers, so if you missed it you can see it here.  If you click on each of the candy hearts it'll play a little 45-60 second true-life story.  In addition to the six that play from the hearts, if you scan down the screen you'll find a link to one more, and there are a few more that I haven't listened to yet here.

Monday 17 February 2014

We are the 1%

The slogan of Occupy Wall St. was "we are the 99%" - the ordinary people, not the super-rich.

A few weeks back, Martin and I got an unexpected insight into the lives of those super-rich 1%'ers.  They're us!  According to GlobalRichList.com, Martin's income is in the top 0.42% globally.  He's the 25 millionth richest person in the world!

The numbers are calculated on a 'purchasing power parity' basis - i.e. they try to account for what you can buy with that income based on what prices are where you live.  If we lived in Thailand, but Martin received the same income as he gets here, he'd be in the top 0.08% of income earners globally as the cost of living in Thailand is a lot lower than in New Zealand.

So, what's it like to be so rich?  To be honest, it feels quite modest to me.  Roughly a third of our income goes to taxes and donations, a third essentially to savings (that's 'Mortgage + Kiwisaver' on the graph) and we live on the remaining third.
Our savings are targeted at being able to support ourselves in retirement at about the level of National Super and to own a 2-3 bedroom unit outright.  We're assuming that the government won't be giving us a pension as we don't think that rich people like ourselves should be relying on government support.

The amount that we live on (excluding our mortgage payments, Kiwisaver contributions and donations) is significantly less than the amount the government pays to retired couples who own their own home - although it is much more than we would get if Martin was unemployed and I was back on the sickness benefit.

benefits for a couple who won their own home, one eligible for a disability allowance, as of Sep 2011weeklyannual
M on unemployment, H on sickness benefit$395$20,623
our current expenditure
$472$24,661
National Super$582$30,380

I've come away from this exercise feeling subdued.  I've always known we were wealthy - after all, how many couples can live on only one income? - but I hadn't realised quite how far up the tree we are.  I'm stunned by how poor that means everyone else must be.

A little thing from the latest Grapevine magazine confirmed that impression:
If you've got food in your fridge, clothes on your back, a roof over your head and a place to sleep
... you are richer than 75% of the world.

If you have money in the bank, cash in your wallet, and spare change in a pocket somewhere
... you're among the top 8% of the world's wealthiest.
and
If you're reading this
... you're more fortunate than 3 billion people in the world who cannot read at all.

Friday 14 February 2014

New Pictures

For the first time in many months, today I managed to change the pictures I look at above my bed :-)  I even cleaned the fly-dirt off the perspex.  I don't think I've done that before, and there was quite a lot there, but warm water with a slosh of vinegar in it cleaned it off nicely!


Now I have new scenes to muse on, plus I can begin to acquaint myself with the geography of Europe :-)