purchasing power parity
purchasing power parity
related to this, how much does stuff cost where you live? take, for instance
a big mac
a liter and a half of mineral water
a simple ballpen
two liter cocacola bottle
a can of insecticide
a dildo
a plain notebook
a brand new toyota corolla
a monthly gym subscription
the services of a cheap hooker
a big mac
a liter and a half of mineral water
a simple ballpen
two liter cocacola bottle
a can of insecticide
a dildo
a plain notebook
a brand new toyota corolla
a monthly gym subscription
the services of a cheap hooker
Re: purchasing power parity
I don't think I've bought any of those things in like, ten years.
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Re: purchasing power parity
Oh, this should be fun! My responses will be in violet, and all values in United States Dollars.
Torco wrote:a big mac about $4 or so before tax, but who buys just the sandwich here?
a liter and a half of mineral water depending on where you look, $1.00 or so, but mineral water isn't common
a simple ballpen not more than 50¢ each
two liter cocacola bottle varies greatly... anywhere from 89¢-$1.89 per bottle, excluding tax, but I normally pay about $1.20 where I shop
a can of insecticide $3-ish
a dildo wouldn't know, but I'll guess about $10
a plain notebook normally about $1, but you can get them for about 20¢ a pop closer to when school starts
a brand new toyota corolla if you pay cash, probably about $15000... I think
a monthly gym subscription $20 seems about standard
the services of a cheap hooker probably about $50 for a short session, but I'm a virgin, so I wouldn't really know
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Re: purchasing power parity
These are all guesses.
a big mac - a quick google says around £2 ($3.10) on average, although I thought it was at least £3 ($4.65). I don't go to McD's that often.
a liter and a half of mineral water - i don't think we get 1.5L bottles, but it'll be something in the region of 80p ($1.24) for the cheapest
a simple ballpen - not sure, but i think i've got them for about 30p ($0.46) before
two liter cocacola bottle - £1.20 ($1.86) ish, not sure because i hate coke and never by 2L bottles anyway
a can of insecticide - no idea, we don't have insects unless you go up north into the countryside.
a dildo - start at £10 ($15.50), probably £20 ($30) for a decent one
a plain notebook - argh, not sure. £1-£2 ($1.50-$3), I would try and get away with paying less than £1.
a brand new toyota corolla - A Toyota auris (which has superseded the corolla in the uk) is £12,295 ($19,080) - £14,495 ($22,495) according to the website
a monthly gym subscription - I dunno. It was £40 ($62) at the place near my uni but I think it went up over the 5 years I was in York to £100 ($155). That's not a low-end place, though. At the municipal gyms in Edinburgh it's £5.20 ($8) a go if you've got the membership card, which is £25 ($40) for a year. If you go once a week that's an average of £24-25 a month. A private gym that came up on google is £25-35 ($40-55) a month with a joining fee of £45 ($70).
the services of a cheap hooker - Absolutely no idea, and I couldn't google this one for you... I hear £100 ($155) or £200 ($310) will get you sex with a normal hooker, no idea if that's overshooting the mark though.
Yeah, it's expensive here.
a big mac - a quick google says around £2 ($3.10) on average, although I thought it was at least £3 ($4.65). I don't go to McD's that often.
a liter and a half of mineral water - i don't think we get 1.5L bottles, but it'll be something in the region of 80p ($1.24) for the cheapest
a simple ballpen - not sure, but i think i've got them for about 30p ($0.46) before
two liter cocacola bottle - £1.20 ($1.86) ish, not sure because i hate coke and never by 2L bottles anyway
a can of insecticide - no idea, we don't have insects unless you go up north into the countryside.
a dildo - start at £10 ($15.50), probably £20 ($30) for a decent one
a plain notebook - argh, not sure. £1-£2 ($1.50-$3), I would try and get away with paying less than £1.
a brand new toyota corolla - A Toyota auris (which has superseded the corolla in the uk) is £12,295 ($19,080) - £14,495 ($22,495) according to the website
a monthly gym subscription - I dunno. It was £40 ($62) at the place near my uni but I think it went up over the 5 years I was in York to £100 ($155). That's not a low-end place, though. At the municipal gyms in Edinburgh it's £5.20 ($8) a go if you've got the membership card, which is £25 ($40) for a year. If you go once a week that's an average of £24-25 a month. A private gym that came up on google is £25-35 ($40-55) a month with a joining fee of £45 ($70).
the services of a cheap hooker - Absolutely no idea, and I couldn't google this one for you... I hear £100 ($155) or £200 ($310) will get you sex with a normal hooker, no idea if that's overshooting the mark though.
Yeah, it's expensive here.
Last edited by finlay on Wed Jan 05, 2011 7:18 pm, edited 3 times in total.
- Yiuel Raumbesrairc
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Re: purchasing power parity
[quote="Torco"]related to this, how much does stuff cost where you live? take, for instance
a big mac = 4$
a liter and a half of mineral water = 0,75$
a simple ballpen = 1$
two liter cocacola bottle = 1,50$ (easily found cheaper on special)
a can of insecticide = 5$
a dildo = ??
a plain notebook = 1$
a brand new toyota corolla = 15 450$
a monthly gym subscription = 25$
the services of a cheap hooker = ??
Montreal, Canada
a big mac = 4$
a liter and a half of mineral water = 0,75$
a simple ballpen = 1$
two liter cocacola bottle = 1,50$ (easily found cheaper on special)
a can of insecticide = 5$
a dildo = ??
a plain notebook = 1$
a brand new toyota corolla = 15 450$
a monthly gym subscription = 25$
the services of a cheap hooker = ??
Montreal, Canada
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Re: purchasing power parity
I have only ever purchased one of those items. It was a long time ago, and my memory of the event is clouded by time, and possibly other factors.
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Re: purchasing power parity
Why on earth are you comparing the prices of dildos? (or is it dildoes? dildi?)
Re: purchasing power parity
There's this neat toy called "Google" which gives all sorts of information...
E.g. prices of dildos. Looks like $28 to $109 covers their best-sellers. Vibrators run from $18 to $52— a bargain!
Searching for hookers in Chicago gives this paper by Levitt and Venkatesh, which gives an average of $34 per sex act— but the most frequent act is oral sex. Vaginal sex will run you twice that. And prostitutes turn out to do racial profiling: white customers pay a premium.
E.g. prices of dildos. Looks like $28 to $109 covers their best-sellers. Vibrators run from $18 to $52— a bargain!
Searching for hookers in Chicago gives this paper by Levitt and Venkatesh, which gives an average of $34 per sex act— but the most frequent act is oral sex. Vaginal sex will run you twice that. And prostitutes turn out to do racial profiling: white customers pay a premium.
Re: purchasing power parity
Goes to show you how things that I figure are absolutely everyday [save for the dildi and the hookers, which I just threw in there for fun, and the big mac, which I threw in you can guess why] aren't everywhere.Salmoneus wrote:I have only ever purchased one of those items. It was a long time ago, and my memory of the event is clouded by time, and possibly other factors.
Out of sheer curiosity... was it a can of insecticide?
@Yiuel: are those canadian dollars?
why notWhy on earth are you comparing the prices of dildos? (or is it dildoes? dildi?)
Sure I can google "buy dildo minessotta" or something, but this isn't what this is about.There's this neat toy called "Google" which gives all sorts of information...
Really? curiousa liter and a half of mineral water depending on where you look, $1.00 or so, but mineral water isn't common
that's cheap! I pay around 5 at the supermarketa can of insecticide $3-ish
seems cheap to me, they start at $30, $50 for a decent one here.a dildo - start at £10 ($15.50), probably £20 ($30) for a decent one
0_O how do you not die of thirst!a liter and a half of mineral water - i don't think we get 1.5L bottles, but it'll be something in the region of 80p ($1.24) for the cheapest
finally, I'm surprised... our hookers are expensive in comparison to elsewhere [save for fin's estimate, which is probably inflated]
I guess my list isn't cross-cultural. how about we add to it:
a big mac
a liter and a half of mineral water
a simple ballpen
two liter cocacola bottle
a can of insecticide
a dildo
a plain notebook
a brand new toyota corolla
a monthly gym subscription
the services of a cheap hooker
a kilo of beef
gasoline/petrol/whatever
a pack of your favourite cigarrettes
a joint [of marihuana]
running shoes
a hot dog
Re: purchasing power parity
We have drinkable tap water. *is way superior to Chilenos*Torco wrote:0_O how do you not die of thirst!
Re: purchasing power parity
xD we do too, but it tastes like soap and swimming pool... do consider most of our supply comes from the Andes mountains, and is therefore pretty hard.Astraios wrote:We have drinkable tap water. *is way superior to Chilenos*Torco wrote:0_O how do you not die of thirst!
Re: purchasing power parity
I consider Latinos at their best when it's hard.Torco wrote:xD we do too, but it tastes like soap and swimming pool... do consider most of our supply comes from the Andes mountains, and is therefore pretty hard.
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Re: purchasing power parity
Son.Torco wrote:@Yiuel: are those canadian dollars?
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Re: purchasing power parity
That works out a bit better for more fun stuff. Lessee...
If you want to talk about actual drinking mineral water, a bottle of Perrier here in the US isn't more than $1.80 at most grocery stores.
Torco wrote:a kilo of beef depends on the cut of beef you want. The steaks I prefer run normally about $11 per kilo on a good day
gasoline/petrol/whatever Just over $3 per gallon/$0.79 per litre, but it varies quite a bit
a pack of your favourite cigarrettes Here in NC, about $3.50 per pack of a decent brand; up in Wisconsin, about $6.50 (but I don't smoke, I just notice these things...)
a joint [of marihuana] wouldn't know
running shoes I wouldn't pay more than $30, and you can get a decent pair for that
a hot dog $2 or so
Unlike in Germany, most people don't drink carbonated water unless it's soda/pop/cola and, as such, is heavily sugared and with lots of chemicals thrown in for good measure. I use the cost of tonic water and club sodas, which are the closest things... and those are mostly used as mixers.Torco wrote:Really? curiousvampireshark wrote:a liter and a half of mineral water depending on where you look, $1.00 or so, but mineral water isn't common
If you want to talk about actual drinking mineral water, a bottle of Perrier here in the US isn't more than $1.80 at most grocery stores.
I do have the advantage of a military grocery store here that sells things for not much more over cost, but that's really the only place we purchase insecticides. That price isn't surprising, though, considering I think I remember seeing that level of price out "on the economy". And we really don't use insecticide much, especially back when we had the Venus' flytrap.Torco wrote:that's cheap! I pay around 5 at the supermarketvampireshark wrote:a can of insecticide $3-ish
Last edited by vampireshark on Thu Jan 06, 2011 12:12 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: purchasing power parity
Torco wrote:a big mac-- USD 4.00 or so, plus tax, but eww McDonalds
a liter and a half of mineral water-- distilled water is $1/gal = $0.264/litre = 0.396/one-and-a-half-litre, though I only use that for chemistry
a simple ballpen -- all my pens are about 7 years old, and none are "simple"
two liter cocacola bottle -- 12 cans x 335 mL = about $4, with a recycling deposit of $0.60 (take cans for recycling, get the deposit back), so about $2
a can of insecticide -- the winter makes bugs go away
a dildo -- 40-50, fancy ones can be really expensive
a plain notebook -- loose 3-hole paper is cheaper
a brand new toyota corolla -- lots and lots, less if you argue with the salesman. I hear it's more for women and so forth
a monthly gym subscription -- shovel snow, it's free. Then go hiking in the month of summer
the services of a cheap hooker -- you don't want a cheap hooker, you want an expensive one
a kilo of beef -- good meat is expensive, cheap "meat" goes as low as $2/lb~$1/kg but ugh
gasoline/petrol/whatever-- nearing $4/gal = ~$1.056/litre, though the price changes almost daily. I've been to France, I know how ridiculous this is
a pack of your favourite cigarrettes-- zero, since I prefer not to smoke. I hear they're taxed quite heavily
a joint [of marihuana]-- I decline to answer on the grounds that doing so might tend to incriminate me (but really zero again)
running shoes-- as much as you want to pay. I pay $15 per year on average for shoes
a hot dog-- $4 for 12 at the store, I think
We have a bit (note: understatement) of chlorine in ours, positively ruined my tea until I figured out that leaving a pitcher of water to "breathe" for a day really helped.Torco wrote:xD we do too, but it tastes like soap and swimming pool... do consider most of our supply comes from the Andes mountains, and is therefore pretty hard.
Re: purchasing power parity
Well, if you buy like a package of uncooked hot dogs from the grocery store, I bet they probably work out to $0.50 each or so, but if you buy them from some roadside hot dog stand, then yeah, they are $2.
From the gas station: 2-liter coke is $2.35. When I bought cigarettes for my sister, I remember them being about $5. Gas is $3.25/gallon here right now, but I remember when $1.50/gallon was considered highway robbery. (On the plus side, I don't drive anymore.) Something else you might want to add is a gallon of milk ($4 in the gas station, probably a bit less in the grocery store).
From the gas station: 2-liter coke is $2.35. When I bought cigarettes for my sister, I remember them being about $5. Gas is $3.25/gallon here right now, but I remember when $1.50/gallon was considered highway robbery. (On the plus side, I don't drive anymore.) Something else you might want to add is a gallon of milk ($4 in the gas station, probably a bit less in the grocery store).
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Re: purchasing power parity
The only one of those I've ever bought is a two liter bottle of Coke, and I know the price of that because I drink it all the time. Typically $1.99 as a base price, but frequently on sale for as little as $1, if you are willing to buy six to get that price.
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Re: purchasing power parity
Back in my day, gas was around USD 0.80/gallon = 0.211/litre. I don't recall the exact number in France, but double digits of francs/litre, back when the franc was about 4 or 5 to our dollar (and still existed).faiuwle wrote:Gas is $3.25/gallon here right now, but I remember when $1.50/gallon was considered highway robbery. (On the plus side, I don't drive anymore.) Something else you might want to add is a gallon of milk ($4 in the gas station, probably a bit less in the grocery store).
Milk is $2.50/gal at the convenience store across the street, $2 at walmart, $3 at the supermarket unless you have their "club card" in which case it's $1.80. Also taxes. Robbery! (Tired of working out litre conversions, bah. Can't we all go metric?)
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Re: purchasing power parity
That can work, but it's slow. If you don't want to wait, you can also get rid of a lot of the chlorine by vigorously stirring/churning the water around for a couple minutes, in a way that gets a lot of air bubbles mixed in; when the bubbles pop at the surface, they take chlorine with them. Pouring water back and forth between two containers works great, for instance - anything to increase the exposure of water to the air. Install an aerator on your kitchen faucet if it doesn't already have one - very easy to do. And since your purpose is tea, it may help to know that bringing water to a full boil for a couple minutes will also remove virtually all chlorine. (If it still tastes bad after boiling it, chlorine isn't the culprit.)hito wrote:We have a bit (note: understatement) of chlorine in ours, positively ruined my tea until I figured out that leaving a pitcher of water to "breathe" for a day really helped.
Re: purchasing power parity
okay here it is for stuff in Vancouver, to the best of my knowledge
(all values in Canadian Beaver Pelts)
a big mac
about four dollars. Seven for the combo with drink and fries
a liter and a half of mineral water
two dollars
a simple ballpen
thirty to fifty cents, but they usually come in packs of ten rather than singles
two liter cocacola bottle
three dollars
a can of insecticide
dunno. Ten bucks?
a dildo
low end to high end .... thirty dollars up to like two hundred
a plain notebook
three bucks
a brand new toyota corolla
twenty thousand dollars
a monthly gym subscription
forty bucks
the services of a cheap hooker
dunno. never paid for it. Don't intend to.
a kilo of beef
six, seven bucks
gasoline/petrol/whatever
it's like $1.15 a liter at the moment
a pack of your favourite cigarrettes
I like Du Maurier and Camel ... they're about ten bucks a pack
but you can get some pretty ghetto smokes for like six dollars a pack
a joint [of marihuana]
five dollars, pretty consistently. But it's not worth buying pre-rolled. I can get a QO for fifty bucks.
running shoes
fifty bucks for some bargain jankity ones, up to two-hundred-plus for fancy ones
a hot dog
two bucks for a crap 7-11 one, five or six bucks for a fancy one with onions and sauerkraut and whatnot from a street cart
(all values in Canadian Beaver Pelts)
a big mac
about four dollars. Seven for the combo with drink and fries
a liter and a half of mineral water
two dollars
a simple ballpen
thirty to fifty cents, but they usually come in packs of ten rather than singles
two liter cocacola bottle
three dollars
a can of insecticide
dunno. Ten bucks?
a dildo
low end to high end .... thirty dollars up to like two hundred
a plain notebook
three bucks
a brand new toyota corolla
twenty thousand dollars
a monthly gym subscription
forty bucks
the services of a cheap hooker
dunno. never paid for it. Don't intend to.
a kilo of beef
six, seven bucks
gasoline/petrol/whatever
it's like $1.15 a liter at the moment
a pack of your favourite cigarrettes
I like Du Maurier and Camel ... they're about ten bucks a pack
but you can get some pretty ghetto smokes for like six dollars a pack
a joint [of marihuana]
five dollars, pretty consistently. But it's not worth buying pre-rolled. I can get a QO for fifty bucks.
running shoes
fifty bucks for some bargain jankity ones, up to two-hundred-plus for fancy ones
a hot dog
two bucks for a crap 7-11 one, five or six bucks for a fancy one with onions and sauerkraut and whatnot from a street cart
Last edited by Kereb on Thu Jan 06, 2011 3:00 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: purchasing power parity
We get half litre and 1 litre bottles, definitely, I'm just not sure about 1.5L bottles. I'm also guessing here, anyway, but 80p isn't expensive. Also it's cheaper to think ahead and fill your water at a tap. Also, again, not as hot here so carrying water around isn't as much of an issue. (ie, you can get away with not doing it)Torco wrote:0_O how do you not die of thirst!a liter and a half of mineral water - i don't think we get 1.5L bottles, but it'll be something in the region of 80p ($1.24) for the cheapest
a kilo of beef - about £6 depending on the quality and cut
gasoline/petrol/whatever - £1.25/L, I hear, and it's gonna go up by about 2p ( ) because the government is raising VAT.
a pack of your favourite cigarrettes - I've never smoked, but it was £5-6 for 20 last I checked, which admittedly was a few years ago.
a joint [of marihuana] - i've only bought it in Amsterdam where it was €10 for a packet. Here probably £10 or £20 for an eighth of an ounce (although it could be a quarter - I don't know the sizes well enough) and it wouldn't be as good quality (it'll be a round amount of cash, though)
running shoes - £20-40
a hot dog - <£2, but not sure.
Incidentally, never bought any of these items to my knowledge. I've only bought half-kilos of beef.
As for the dildos, you were surprised that I said they were cheap, but I'm only going on what I would pay, which would be up to £30 for a good one (they do go higher than this though, ofc). I have a catalogue which states that the entry price is £9.99, but it's only a few inches long. The one i have cost £15.
Re: purchasing power parity
Embarrassingly enough, I have no idea what the actual prices for these items are here in Slovenia. I could tell you the price for a large, hearty loaf of bread (<1 euro), a small pot of yoghurt (25-90 cents, depending on size and brand), and most fruit (~1 euro per kilogram)... I would guess bottled water is around 60-80 cents per 1.5 liters (although you shouldn't quote me on this). I don't eat fast food, smoke, or hire hookers, and I only eat red meat in restaurants... etc.
According to pdfs here, a Corolla apparently costs between 15,000 and 23,000 euros, depending on what kind of engine you choose (from 1,33 regular to 2,0 Diesel). Last I checked, gas is around 1.2 - 1.3 euros per liter, for 95 octane unleaded (I think diesel might actually be more expensive).
The ballpoint pens I buy (actually not technically ballpoint, since they use liquid ink; I write a lot by hand, and can't really stand the increased friction of cheap ballpoints) cost around 1.70 euros each, although I've paid 2+ pounds for a similar one in Britain.
I would add to the list, at the very least...
- monthly rent for a 1-bedroom apartment (40-60 square meters)
- average cost of a square meter of a flat/house (known to be ridiculously high in Ljubljana, usually 2000+ euros per square meter)
- a loaf of bread at a bakery
- 1 kilogram of salt, sugar, flour
- 1 kilogram of pasta
- 1 kilogram of onions
- 1 kilogram of lettuce
- 1 kilogram of apples
- 1 kilogram of bananas
- 1 kilogram of tee/coffee
- 1 liter of milk
- can of beer
- a single/daily bus ticket (for urban transport)
- cost of a long-distance train ticket (say 100 kilometers) or bus ticket for an equivalent journey
- yearly "vehicle upkeep" cost (including any road tax you must pay, the cost of registration & insurance...)
- cost of 1 year at university (in terms of fees)
- cost of a GP consultation
- cost of a dentist's consultation
- cost of a new LCD television
- cost of an iPhone
- cost of an average monthly mobile payment plan/subscription
- monthly costs of trash disposal, heating, electricity, water, and sewage for a smallish flat (~75 square meters)
- monthly cost of a high-speed internet connection
- 3-course dinner at a decent restaurant
- decent (ie. not overpriced English grocery-store) sandwich
At least among the majority population on this board, this could then possibly begin to provide a general idea of how 'cheap' certain places are (since around 75% of the above list is probably relevant to around 75% of the population). If not, I stand corrected...
According to pdfs here, a Corolla apparently costs between 15,000 and 23,000 euros, depending on what kind of engine you choose (from 1,33 regular to 2,0 Diesel). Last I checked, gas is around 1.2 - 1.3 euros per liter, for 95 octane unleaded (I think diesel might actually be more expensive).
The ballpoint pens I buy (actually not technically ballpoint, since they use liquid ink; I write a lot by hand, and can't really stand the increased friction of cheap ballpoints) cost around 1.70 euros each, although I've paid 2+ pounds for a similar one in Britain.
I would add to the list, at the very least...
- monthly rent for a 1-bedroom apartment (40-60 square meters)
- average cost of a square meter of a flat/house (known to be ridiculously high in Ljubljana, usually 2000+ euros per square meter)
- a loaf of bread at a bakery
- 1 kilogram of salt, sugar, flour
- 1 kilogram of pasta
- 1 kilogram of onions
- 1 kilogram of lettuce
- 1 kilogram of apples
- 1 kilogram of bananas
- 1 kilogram of tee/coffee
- 1 liter of milk
- can of beer
- a single/daily bus ticket (for urban transport)
- cost of a long-distance train ticket (say 100 kilometers) or bus ticket for an equivalent journey
- yearly "vehicle upkeep" cost (including any road tax you must pay, the cost of registration & insurance...)
- cost of 1 year at university (in terms of fees)
- cost of a GP consultation
- cost of a dentist's consultation
- cost of a new LCD television
- cost of an iPhone
- cost of an average monthly mobile payment plan/subscription
- monthly costs of trash disposal, heating, electricity, water, and sewage for a smallish flat (~75 square meters)
- monthly cost of a high-speed internet connection
- 3-course dinner at a decent restaurant
- decent (ie. not overpriced English grocery-store) sandwich
At least among the majority population on this board, this could then possibly begin to provide a general idea of how 'cheap' certain places are (since around 75% of the above list is probably relevant to around 75% of the population). If not, I stand corrected...
High Eolic (PDF)
Re: purchasing power parity
- monthly rent for a 1-bedroom apartment (40-60 square meters)Cathbad wrote:I would add to the list, at the very least...
$600-$1000 or more
- average cost of a square meter of a flat/house (known to be ridiculously high in Ljubljana, usually 2000+ euros per square meter)
no clue
- a loaf of bread at a bakery
four dollars
- 1 kilogram of salt, sugar, flour
$1, $1, $1 ... ish
- 1 kilogram of pasta
three dollars
- 1 kilogram of onions
seventy cents
- 1 kilogram of lettuce
two dollars? Usually not bought by weight but by the head
- 1 kilogram of apples
one dollar for like ... spartan, macintosh
more for fancy varieties
- 1 kilogram of bananas
two dollars
- 1 kilogram of tee/coffee
apparently you can get really terrible coffee like maxwell house for ten or eleven bucks for a kilogram tin
but I buy snobby coffee for like sixteen dollars a pound
- 1 liter of milk
three dollars
- can of beer
$1.50
- a single/daily bus ticket (for urban transport)
single trip $2.50
daily pass $8
I buy monthly passes for about 80
- cost of a long-distance train ticket (say 100 kilometers) or bus ticket for an equivalent journey
uh hell I don't know. You can get to Kelowna on Greyhound for about sixty dollars, and that's like 400 km
- yearly "vehicle upkeep" cost (including any road tax you must pay, the cost of registration & insurance...)
I haven't had a car in a couple of years. I remember paying about $1000-1200 a year for insurance. Never did add up how much gas and maintenance was costing. Oil change was $30-40; $20 would get me half a tank of gas (it was a little Honda Civic)
- cost of 1 year at university (in terms of fees)
man that could be anything from five thousand to fifty thousand dollars or more depending on what you're taking
- cost of a GP consultation
I pay about sixty a month for the Medical Services Plan (canadian health insurance) and it covers my GP and anything my GP refers me to. So I don't really know.
- cost of a dentist's consultation
$100 for a cleaning without anything fancy
- cost of a new LCD television
$1000
- cost of an iPhone
$500
- cost of an average monthly mobile payment plan/subscription
$30 in the ads, $50 when you actually get your bill
- monthly costs of trash disposal, heating, electricity, water, and sewage for a smallish flat (~75 square meters)
all together about $100
- monthly cost of a high-speed internet connection
$40
- 3-course dinner at a decent restaurant
how decent? Let's say $50 a person for steaks and appies at such as The Keg
- decent (ie. not overpriced English grocery-store) sandwich
$7
<Anaxandridas> How many artists do you know get paid?
<Anaxandridas> Seriously, name five.
<Anaxandridas> Seriously, name five.
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- Avisaru
- Posts: 704
- Joined: Fri Dec 03, 2010 9:41 am
- Location: NY, USA
Re: purchasing power parity
I heard the loonie hit parity with USD recently, so did it suddenly drop to CAD 4 = USD 1? Or do you have to import the wheat and cows from Kansas and pay 400% tariff?Kereb wrote:- a loaf of bread at a bakery
four dollars
- 1 liter of milk
three dollars
It's USD 0.80~1.00 for both those, down here.
- Yiuel Raumbesrairc
- Avisaru
- Posts: 668
- Joined: Thu Jan 20, 2005 11:17 pm
- Location: Nyeriborma, Elme, Melomers
Re: purchasing power parity
hito wrote:I heard the loonie hit parity with USD recently, so did it suddenly drop to CAD 4 = USD 1? Or do you have to import the wheat and cows from Kansas and pay 400% tariff?Kereb wrote:- a loaf of bread at a bakery
four dollars
- 1 liter of milk
three dollars
It's USD 0.80~1.00 for both those, down here.
You can get cheap loafs of bread at the supermarket for 2$ (650g), but the best bread are at least 3$.
As for milk, fixed price, though I pay 1,50$ for a liter, but it varies from province to province.
I being from the oddball province where food seems to be cheaper, those prices seem "reasonable". (Then again, while in Japan, I paid 75¢ for a liter of milk, and I liked it that way and food was, surprisingly, mostly cheaper.)
"Ez amnar o amnar e cauč."
- Daneydzaus
- Daneydzaus