I'm from the Netherlands, known for its comparatively poor pay for engineers as well as high costs of living.
Despite that, from day 1, when my salary was at its lowest and I was still single, I saved 25% of my salary. A lot of years later and no longer single, I've build up multiple years in savings. Even more than that if I add my spouse. And the funny thing is that the need to do this applies less here, as unemployment benefits are relatively generous.
It just shows the dramatic difference in culture. I'm shocked how even the best paid engineers can't even manage to save 30K. 30K...are you kidding me? A single event or large expense (construction at house, car breaks down) would bankrupt you. And if your cost of living is so enormous, what the hell does 30k even do during unemployment?
If I'd earned 200K+, I'd save so hard and retire 20 years early. The US has such a spending culture.
True, and the other discipline is that at one point I settled on a lifestyle and never upped it again, despite a growing income. So the savings rate itself also increases over time.
I'm from the Netherlands, known for its comparatively poor pay for engineers as well as high costs of living.
Despite that, from day 1, when my salary was at its lowest and I was still single, I saved 25% of my salary. A lot of years later and no longer single, I've build up multiple years in savings. Even more than that if I add my spouse. And the funny thing is that the need to do this applies less here, as unemployment benefits are relatively generous.
It just shows the dramatic difference in culture. I'm shocked how even the best paid engineers can't even manage to save 30K. 30K...are you kidding me? A single event or large expense (construction at house, car breaks down) would bankrupt you. And if your cost of living is so enormous, what the hell does 30k even do during unemployment?
If I'd earned 200K+, I'd save so hard and retire 20 years early. The US has such a spending culture.