It’s Austria, just to save you a click.

  • Square Singer
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    77 months ago

    Depends on the size and your patience. A single room apartment can be had for <€400 if you get lucky.

    And if you have enough patience to get into the government housing program, you pay next to nothing. Buildings older than 1955 are also regulated and quite cheap.

    You can also get cooperative housing flats (and even houses) with quite a low rent. We pay <€800 for about 80m².

    But we did have some 10% increase over the last year.

    And for all of these cheap options you need a lot of patience (between half a year and 5 years). If you need a flat right now, you can easily pay double of that on the free market.

    (All these numbers are for the capital city Vienna. Prices in other places can be much lower. There are dieing villages in many rural areas, where houses are pretty affordable, because nobody wants them.)

    • @noobdoomguy8658
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      17 months ago

      And the income for one? I’d imagine the taxes would tend to flat out a lot of differences, but I know it’s gonna depend on so many things that’s it’s best to omit it.

      • Square Singer
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        57 months ago

        The median income before tax is €55 731 per year and after tax and mandatory health insurance €38 623 per year. That’s per full-time worker, not per household.

        Wikipedia tells me the per-person median income in the USA is $56 287.

        • @noobdoomguy8658
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          27 months ago

          Thanks for the numbers! Seems pretty comfy, especially compared to a less developed country with greater disparity.

          How’s your political climate these days? I know Germany is seeing AfD getting higher ratings for various reasons, but somehow never thought about its German-speaking neighbors.

          • Square Singer
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            37 months ago

            We are sadly ahead of Germany by 10-15 years. Our right wing equivalent (FPÖ) has been around since the country was re-founded after WW2.

            They had their ultra-radical time about 25-30 years ago. Since then they have been in government (I think) three times as a minor partner. Every time there was some big corruption/financial scandal that kicked them back out of government and reduced their election result massively. But time and time again, people keep forgetting and they rise again. Currently they lead again in the polls.

            Luckily, due to their incompetence, they never managed to do much harm, and due to the fact that they actually want to get into government, they are not as crazy radical as the AFD.

            So, it’s not good, but it’s not as bad as Germany, Hungary or Italy.

            There’s no talk about exiting the EU since Brexit, they don’t have the power to get rid of asylum (though they diverted funds from asylum-related issues), and by now they actually argue for “qualified, legal migrants”.

            Other than that, the conservatives have been in government for ~20 years or so, with changing partners. That’s not exactly good, since they do have had a few scandals where they pushed a fair bit of money to the super rich in the country.

            The social democrats elected a marxist as a leader, and since then they managed to overtake the conservatives in the polls.

            The neoliberals get ~9% in the polls and they effectively never managed to do anything with that.

            The greens are jumping rather wildly in the polls, and even though they only get 8-15% they currently hold the President and are in government.