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How much better off are we?

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    #41
    I agree, I think it's about playing it sensible and not 'living to your means', and by that I mean living to your means on good money as a contractor. I'm happily ploughing all the surplus money I have off my mortgage which is a flexible one so I can borrow it all back at any point. This serves as a nice security blanket as well should any bad times come along, large pot of accessible money.
    The cycle of life: born > learn > work > learn > dead.

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      #42
      Originally posted by Dow Jones View Post
      I get the feeling that a few contractors here are like some first-time buyers, seeing only the good times, never the flip side. Remember to factor in your calculations that you will NOT be working throughout the years and that rates can go DOWN as well as up.
      Amen to that. A lot of < 3 year contractors have never seen the downturns, they are like the homebuyers who don't imagien house prices can ever go down either.
      Cooking doesn't get tougher than this.

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        #43
        The big difference is being able to save for the future, as well as the quiet spells. As a permie it wasnt quite hand to mouth but it was close. Very little slack and it could feel like every month there was something that threatened to derail things financially. Saving just wasn't an option. There was a permie pension scheme but that was it, and there wasnt really enough going into that anyway.

        As a contractor I can pay the bills and stash a good chunk away every month in pension, ISA and straightforward cash savings and still pay the bills. We'd survive if I had to go permie again, but only survive.

        The biggest benefit though is not having to deal with management/hr bulltulip, pay reviews, performance reviews, gang bang job interviews and office politics.

        Go in, do the job, get out and onto the next one
        "Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.

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          #44
          Some people here are comparing apples with oranges. To compare contracting and permanent like-for-like, calculate inside IR35, and no income shifting.

          Then, only then, by all means say that what you like about contracting is that it is not like employment.

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            #45
            Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View Post
            Amen to that. A lot of < 3 year contractors have never seen the downturns, they are like the homebuyers who don't imagine house prices can ever go down either.
            didn't

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              #46
              Originally posted by Dow Jones View Post
              I get the feeling that a few contractors here are like some first-time buyers, seeing only the good times, never the flip side. Remember to factor in your calculations that you will NOT be working throughout the years and that rates can go DOWN as well as up.
              I don't disagree, but the same applies to permies. Downturns affect permies too, possibly to the same degree, yet they don't make enough in the good times to ride out the bad. And most are in complete denial about how safe their jobs are.
              Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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                #47
                Originally posted by DaveB View Post
                The biggest benefit though is not having to deal with management/hr bulltulip, pay reviews, performance reviews, gang bang job interviews and office politics.
                I hated that

                Go in, do the job, get out and onto the next one
                that's what work should be all about

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                  #48
                  Yeah, the performance/pay reviews etc are all BS... at the end of the day it's only the opinion of the PERSON conducting it, hand the task to someone else in the company and you could end up with an entirely different summary/perception of how you fit in there.

                  It probably explains a lot of the brown-nosing which goes on in many places, I've never been one to dance around people in authority just because of their job status or in fear it may serve consequences down the line in terms of my own prospects. I've always said it and I tell everyone else who moans about it, but you can make your OWN promotion at any time, you just need to move jobs. Some people are too narrow minded to think that any life exists beyond the boundaries of their current employer.
                  Last edited by chris79; 1 July 2008, 12:18.
                  The cycle of life: born > learn > work > learn > dead.

                  Comment


                    #49
                    Originally posted by chris79 View Post
                    Yeah, the performance/pay reviews etc are all BS... at the end of the day it's only the opinion of the PERSON conducting it, hand the task to someone else in the company and you could end up with an entirely different summary/perception of how you fit in there.
                    Not just that, a lot of the time they have to fit their performance onto a Bell curve, because that's all the budget they have for payrises/bonuses. So you may find yourself marked down in absolute terms because they want to reward some other people. It's all a crock.
                    Cooking doesn't get tougher than this.

                    Comment


                      #50
                      Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View Post
                      Not just that, a lot of the time they have to fit their performance onto a Bell curve, because that's all the budget they have for payrises/bonuses. So you may find yourself marked down in absolute terms because they want to reward some other people. It's all a crock.

                      The whole process and ideaology is far from impartial or unbias as long as there is a human managing it.
                      The cycle of life: born > learn > work > learn > dead.

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