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Economic refugees flee Sydney for NYC

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  • Economic refugees flee Sydney for NYC

    This got me thinking, I live in Sydney... any other Aussies made the move,care to share a story = how/why/when etc? Also can anyone reccomend popular US job sites to browse through?
    Originally posted by Brigid Delaney from SMH-June 26, 2012 View Post
    I finish my delicious, very large chicken and salad sandwich ($5), before taking the train ($2.25) home to my massive apartment ($400 a week), stopping off on the way at a bar to meet some friends for a cocktail ($8) where the waitress - seemingly unaware of the concept of standard measures - slugs a couple of extra shots in my drink.

    No, it's not Sydney, circa 1992 - it's Manhattan, 2012.

    You do not get much change from $10 for a sandwich in Sydney, a bus from the city to Bondi is $3.30, cocktails are as much as $20 and the city boasts some of the most unaffordable housing in the world.
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    Sydney (11), Melbourne (15) and Perth (19) now rank among the world's most expensive cities, while London languishes in 25th spot and New York in 33rd, according to the Mercer Worldwide Cost of Living Survey 2012 released this month.

    My last flat in Sydney - sharing with one other - was a small box we leased for about $700 a week. But we had a glimpse of the sea through the bars on the windows.

    Australians with low or average incomes have been forced for years to be creative: some stay in share houses well into their 30s; others move back with parents; one friend in the not-for-profit sector confessed recently he was staying with an incompatible but corporate girlfriend because he could not afford to rent by himself.

    It's boom time in Australia and if you're in the fluoro-vest economy, you're so loaded you can commute to your second home in Bali. For the rest of the country, however, it's getting a tad difficult to just, you know, live.

    The Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, says she can understand the cost of living pressures on families earning $150,000 a year, but what about those earning a fraction of that?

    Perhaps they should do what I and thousands of others have done and move somewhere cheaper - such as New York.

    NYC & Company, the city's tourism body, released data last month estimating that a staggering 1500 Australians are arriving in New York each day.

    The spokesman Chris Heywood was overjoyed at the invasion: "There are people who come here for long stretches of time and visitor numbers have catapulted into mind-boggling territory - it's almost tripled from previous years."

    But it's not just for holidays. New York is seeing a wave of Australian ''knowledge worker'' migrants, taking advantage of the E3 work visas introduced in 2005.

    The New York Times reports the large number of Australians in the city "appears to be helped by an influx of young professionals seeking opportunities overseas".

    Tony Waldron, 33, of Sydney, who is working in New York as a graphic designer on an E3 visa, says the typical Australian he meets here is "the second wave who maybe went and worked in London in their 20s and went back to Australia but weren't ready to settle down. New York is a logical place to go next."

    What about the recession? "You can live cheaply in Brooklyn and freelance back to Australia if you want to earn a strong currency but not pay big rent," he says.

    Brendan Moffitt, 35, of Sydney, has been living in New York for five years on an artist's visa and says while the cost of housing is comparable with Australia, "New York has cheaper public transport, groceries, phone plans, taxis, clothing and eating out."

    Two weeks ago at the Australian consulate in New York, at a talk by the writer Anna Funder, the room was filled with Australian freelance journalists and writers, subletting flats through Craigslist and exchanging tips on good immigration lawyers and job prospects.

    I met some who, unburdened by the huge student loans American graduates face, were taking up jobs in the (less than well paid) cultural or non-profit institutions and others who were taking advantage of lower than usual rents to linger and maybe knock out that play or book that they had been thinking about, but could not afford to do in Australia.

    In 2002, Richard Florida wrote The Rise of the Creative Class, saying knowledge workers invigorated cities, made neighbourhoods more dynamic and stimulated innovation.

    But in an economy driven by flouro-vests, with house prices to match their salaries, Australia's creative classes are being forced to get a bit creative about where they live.

    Brigid Delaney is the author of This Restless Life.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/societ...#ixzz1ytwVadmD

  • #2
    NYC.



    I love it here. But the funny part is the thing I **** most is how expensive everything is lol. You want cheap, go upstate

    IG: @_olliee

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    • #3
      just read an article that in nyc, women are allowed to walk topless, in all places where men are allowed to do so

      just not be provocative


      sorry for the ot
      Floccinaucinihilipilification

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Ollie View Post
        NYC.



        I love it here. But the funny part is the thing I **** most is how expensive everything is lol. You want cheap, go upstate
        I just found it astounding that NYC is cheaper than Sydney.. interesting point you raise about cost, kind of ironic and i'm not saying that article is wrong, or anyone elses opinion is wrong, but I guess no one can every truly be 100% content or can they?.
        Originally posted by P78 View Post
        just read an article that in nyc, women are allowed to walk topless, in all places where men are allowed to do so

        just not be provocative


        sorry for the ot
        Haha great to know! Something i'll keep in mind if I ever come NYC.
        Last edited by stayclassy; 06-26-2012, 08:14 PM.

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        • #5
          It also depends on your frame of reference. What we as Americans consider "expensive" could be dirt cheap for the Aussies.

          Shit, if I were paying $3600/mo [or $700/wk.] for a place here in Utah, it would be about 5,000 sq. ft., plated with gold, and on 30 acres of property. Might even come with some hot bitches and a horse or two.
          - Bagged '98 Chevy S10 - Stock '88 Volvo 240DL - Broken '87 Mitsubishi Starion ESi-R - Also Broken '87 Shelby Lancer #707/800 -

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          • #6
            Well i lived in queens for most of my life which is like a few blocks from NYC, like we can see the empire state from our rooftop. The cost in the surrounding areas like queens isnt AS bad but it's up there. There are some really awesome areas like Astoria where you could be 10 mins from the center and still have a nice studio for 1k a month. Something to consider, as well as Brooklyn.

            Email | Website | Facebook | Instagram @Broadway_Static

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            • #7
              True, there's a story I saw on Today Tonight (public interest type program in Aus) and it compares the costs of living in Australia VS China..
              Latest news coverage, email, free stock quotes, live scores and video are just the beginning. Discover more every day at Yahoo!

              Imagine only paying $3 for your water bills per quater and $10 for gas. You wouldn't need to earn much to be living like a king in China!
              On a side note, does anyone have any job sites they have used or can reccomend for me to have a look through? I'd just like to see what's on offer, satisfy my curiosity..
              Last edited by stayclassy; 06-26-2012, 11:13 PM.

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