R
I read "new car sales are down 65% to 70% this year" in the paper, as well as hearing it on the grapevine from those in the motor trade. One garageman said 75% of his sales were to public sector people or people with government jobs eg teacher / lecturer / nurse etc. Its hardly surprising seeing as much of the rest of the economy has dried up. A farmer I was talking to recently complained about the price he was getting for milk was half what it was a few years ago etc. Shops / retail sales are way down, the construction industry is very quiet etc....its not rocket science for a garage man to know who most of his customers are.( He knows many people in his locality....and if they buy a car off him, he know then then !)who keeps them kind of statistics?
I know new car sales are down 65% to 70% this year , according to reports. I heard though that of the new 2009 cars that were sold this year, three quarters were to public sector workers of one type or another ( people whose job and pension was guaranteed by the government ).
Any truth in that rumour?
I know from a friend who has a quality clothes shop in a smallish town (where everyone knows most people ) that most sales there over the past six months follow the same pattern.
Thank God someone is spending money anyway or the government would have no tax coming in at all.
Public sector workers don't have to buy new cars. They get them for free, like their pensions.
A guy in a garage told me.
That is a bizarre assumption.
Am in the motor trade and if those kind of stats were available I would know about it.
I took MandaC to be referring to the assumption of the OP
I know new car sales are down 65% to 70% this year , according to reports. I heard though that of the new 2009 cars that were sold this year, three quarters were to public sector workers of one type or another ( people whose job and pension was guaranteed by the government ).
Any truth in that rumour?
I took MandaC to be referring to the assumption of the OP
I know new car sales are down 65% to 70% this year , according to reports. I heard though that of the new 2009 cars that were sold this year, three quarters were to public sector workers of one type or another ( people whose job and pension was guaranteed by the government ).
Any truth in that rumour?
I know from a friend who has a quality clothes shop in a smallish town (where everyone knows most people ) that most sales there over the past six months follow the same pattern.
Thank God someone is spending money anyway or the government would have no tax coming in at all.
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