RaymondPierreL3, to geopolitics
@RaymondPierreL3@aus.social avatar

Greg Jericho spells it out with graphics… the Australian standard of living has been falling since 2020 and will take years to recover (if at all). All of the noise made about wages fueling inflation is a lot of bull, there is no truth to it and no data to back it up. Don’t believe what most conservative economists tell you. Don’t believe a foolish press medium either. Wages need to move faster than inflation for us to be as well off as we were fourteen years ago (14 yrs… yes, that’s right). Neo-liberal economic policies are all about feeding the greedy at the top of the food chain, period.

#economy #wages #StandardOfLiving

Australians have lost 14 years of progress on living standards. A wages breakout? Please. If only https://www.theguardian.com/business/grogonomics/article/2024/may/16/australia-wage-price-index-figures-inflation-salary-growth?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

srijit, to bengaluru

The Global Liveability Index 2023, from Economist Intelligence Unit’s (EIU), is available now. It ranks the cities that have the best and worst living conditions and quality of life around the world. EIU’s liveability index quantifies the challenges presented to an individual’s lifestyle and standard of living in 173 cities worldwide. The index measures cities on five broad indicators — stability, culture and environment, healthcare, education and infrastructure. The highest score a city can get is 100.

Bengaluru (Bangalore) secured 148th spot with a score of 58.7. Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Ahmadabad have slightly better scores.

I believe Bengaluru (Bangalore) has the competence and the bandwidth to rank much better. All that is required in political will. If somebody has lived in Bengaluru even for few weeks, the first obvious expectation for improvement will be better traffic management, roads, public transport and cleaner city with less pollution. Bengaluru has the highest traffic density of any major Indian city, with close to 12.5 million vehicles for a population of 11 million. This clearly shows that there is lot of scope to improve the efficiency of public transport system which will deter people from using personal vehicles.

cc: @mastodonindians @srijit

srijit, to bengaluru

The Global Liveability Index 2023, from Economist Intelligence Unit’s (EIU), is available now. It ranks the cities that have the best and worst living conditions and quality of life around the world. EIU’s liveability index quantifies the challenges presented to an individual’s lifestyle and standard of living in 173 cities worldwide. The index measures cities on five broad indicators — stability, culture and environment, healthcare, education and infrastructure. The highest score a city can get is 100.

Bengaluru (Bangalore) secured 148th spot with a score of 58.7. Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Ahmadabad have slightly better scores.

I believe Bengaluru (Bangalore) has the competence and the bandwidth to rank much better. All that is required in political will. If somebody has lived in Bengaluru even for few weeks, the first obvious expectation for improvement will be better traffic management, roads, public transport and cleaner city.

cc: @mastodonindians @srijit

Graphic by Prajna Ghosh, ThePri…

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