There were definitely worse things, but we all had way more money. In the 90's a person on a minimum wage job could get a mortgage, can you imagine?
Life was better in the nineties and noughties, say most Britons
Submitted 7 months ago by thehatfox@lemmy.world to unitedkingdom@feddit.uk
Comments
Devi@kbin.social 7 months ago
Aggravationstation@feddit.uk 7 months ago
Nope, can’t picture it at all. Still blows my mind that a family of 4 could live on a single wage.
Devi@kbin.social 7 months ago
Both my parents have always worked but I had friends as a kid whose dad worked low paid factory jobs, moms didn't work and they weren't really struggling. Not like you see today anyway, no food banks or getting evicted, they might have had the tesco no frills crisps.
BruceTwarzen@kbin.social 7 months ago
It's crazy. I had many friends where only one person worked and they had two children and all bought or build a house. Now i look at my sister and her boyfriend with two kids. He has a good paying job and she works an okay job. There is no way in hell they could just buy a house
perviouslyiner@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Also the peak of contracting (before IR35) - there were plenty of tech workers on insane “salaries” just doing normal jobs.
ReCursing@kbin.social 7 months ago
So life was better when e didn't have a tory government absolutely fucking everything up that makes the country worth living in? Colour me shocked. (yes there are international factors at play, and factors beyond the government's control, but they have absolutely exacerbated every single one of those things)
TacticsConsort@yiffit.net 7 months ago
I mean, I was pretty young at the time, but good god even I can see how we’ve been obliterated by inflation. There’s a specific chocolate here in the UK, a tiny little one for children called Freddo the Frog. Just a little cartoon chocolate frog, nothing fancy.
Their price has multiplied by a factor of TWENTY in the past 20 years. And I know pretty damn well that the amount everyone is getting paid has not increased by a factor of 20. Sure this is just a small irrelevant little chocolate bar and other things have inflated less, but like. It’s probably the easiest thing to notice.
But yeah also playing in the street or taking a bike ride around town with your friends was a thing when I was a kid. Sure we were all probably a nuisance, but these days… I don’t think I’ve seen anyone playing outside in ten years. The places we’d ride bikes got bought up and removed. And even the idea of allowing children to play outside feels… socially unacceptable.
Also early Youtube and Facebook were COMPLETELY different beasts that just didn’t have the millions of hours of design work put into them to suck people in and keep them there. Oh, and flash games were a really big thing too if you wanted to play on the computer. They were amazing. And big-name games were in a really good spot, paid DLC and the pay-to-win blight hadn’t really started, and stuff like World of Warcraft, LAN Halo, and other games you could play over at a friend’s house were at their peaks from a social point of view.
…I know nostalgia is a trap, but god, it really isn’t hard to think of things to be nostalgic for from that time, and I was only born in the very late 90s. At least I’ve got plenty of friends online these days though.
brap@lemmy.world 7 months ago
I thought you were my age but I was early 80s and feel the exact same way about all your points. I guess the decline has been ongoing for a while.
HotBeef@feddit.uk 7 months ago
Weren’t Freddos 5p and now about 40p? So 8x. Not that your point isn’t still valid. Wages have maybe doubled.
TacticsConsort@yiffit.net 7 months ago
They’re £1 a piece over where I am, me and my brother literally always joke that they’re the number one indicator that the economy is in shambles
VirtualOdour@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
I didn’t ache in the morning, hairline was better, skin smoother…
Every boomer comic is about old people saying life was better when they were young, or that they hate their wife.
alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 months ago
The difference is that even young people say life was better when boomers were young.
Higher wages, cheaper housing, lower cost of living.
Blamemeta@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Could support a family on a factory wages. Now there arent factories.
JowlesMcGee@kbin.social 7 months ago
Was better in some regards. I think most minorities in the US would agree that they at least feel safe and more free to exist in 2024 than they would in the 1980s or earlier.
drolex@sopuli.xyz 7 months ago
Life was better
Picture of the Spice Girls
Pic non related
HexesofVexes@lemmy.world 7 months ago
[X] Member of the EU. [X] One of the wealthiest nations on earth. [X] The best healthcare on earth. [X] One of the strongest higher education sectors on earth.
All sounds good to me.
The first was lost to the old voting for the young. The second fled with austerity - slowly eroding the wealth of a nation. The third succumbed to a slow cancer of underfunding and an unfolding demographic crisis. The fourth is about to fall due to nationalisation and massive underfunding.
Emperor@feddit.uk 7 months ago
The strapline says “nostalgia” but we are in a cost-of-living crisis, the climate apocalypse is starting to kick in and there are conflicts happening that some have said resemble the precursors to WW1 and WW2.
And while things have been worse since the noughties (what are we calling the 2010s? The Blunder Years? The Enshittening) we seem to have fallen off a cliff half-way through. The Weaselverse was a funny idea thrown out there but it would explain a lot.
I wondered whether it is just some recentist bias, so, being a masochist, I went through every year and came up with a “shit years” list:
- 1997 and 2020
- 2019
- 2021 into 2022
- 2018
- 2017
Now that’s part of the 20-25 year (generational) cycle of The Reckoning, so is personal to me, but that weasal fucked me up good and proper.
tal@lemmy.today 7 months ago
In what decade was life best for people? Britons typically say that it was whenever they themselves were young
I seem to recall reading similar material about non-British positions as well.
NickwithaC@lemmy.world 7 months ago
I wonder what might have happened in 2010 to stunt the progress…
DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe 7 months ago
I wonder if some policy changes from the 80’s might have had profound systemic effects
Wanderer@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Houses got more expensive and wages stayed low. Immigration from the third world was a mistake. We should have reinvested in ourselves for the benefit of the people insead of the benefit of businesses and land owners, and also stop being so concerned about a lowing population.
TacticsConsort@yiffit.net 7 months ago
I don’t think the immigrants are to blame. They make a really easy target for politicians to blame, but… I mean, we both saw Boris Johnson campaigning for his fucking life on ‘SAVE THE NHS SAVE THE NHS, JUST LET ME BAN ALL IMMIGRANTS AND RESTRICT HEALTHCARE SO I CAN SAVE THE NHS’ and then he didn’t give the NHS any money or support or investment, he just slipped a an absolutely fat bonus to all his tory friends and big businesses.
We should have invested in ourselves, yes. Just, please don’t be fooled into thinking we invested into immigrants. ‘We’ (the Tories) invested into the offshore bank accounts of the 0.1%.
Emperor@feddit.uk 7 months ago
I don’t think the immigrants are to blame.
They’re easy to blame though. No government is going to say “you are suffering because of our policies” and the Tories will always point fingers at some group to spread the blame.
Wanderer@lemm.ee 7 months ago
I didn’t say we invested in immigrants. We didn’t invest at all.
It’s a cost saving exercise at the expense of the everday person.
pupbiru@aussie.zone 7 months ago
immigrants are almost universally good for economies: they disproportionately start small businesses which leads to jobs and employment. they work hard because they’re thankful to be in the country they chose to be in
Wanderer@lemm.ee 7 months ago
The metrics they just for immigrants are intentionally misleading. They fill jobs that no one else will do because they work for less, that’s not a good thing that is bad for the locals say wages are suppressed. They say we need immigrants because we don’t have people with the skills yo do that job, the reason people don’t have those skills is because we don’t invest in people. So locals now don’t get the higher trained job because its cheaper to give it to someone else. Population is going down so things like houses will get cheaper but that bad for government numbers so immigrant get brought in to keep house prices high. That’s bad for locals.
Immigration is good for GDP yes. But the everday person get less jobs, less training less pay and then has to pay more for rent. Who gives a shit about GDP is disposable income goes down?
Then there is a lot non financial issues also. But they are more subjective and people want to talk about then even less, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t important.
PatMustard@feddit.uk 7 months ago
When asked to think about their own lives, Britons are most likely to say that the best years of their life so far have been their twenties. Three in ten Britons aged 20 and older (30%) nominate that decade as their best, a figure which is largely consistent however old they are.
While the 90s was a bit of geopolitical stability, these findings seem to be more influenced by people enjoying the freedom of their youth
root_beer@midwest.social 7 months ago
Someone said that the ‘90s were probably the best time to be a young adult in the US (with obvious exceptions of course), and having become one after 9/11–I got my first degree literally ten days after that—I am inclined to agree.
Flax_vert@feddit.uk 7 months ago
2012 was peak britannia in the last few decades
MrNesser@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Under a labour government shocker
Aggravationstation@feddit.uk 7 months ago
Yea, strange how a government actually investing money in infrastructure and public services improves the lives of people overall.
floofloof@lemmy.ca 7 months ago
Even stranger that so many voters seem unable to see this obvious truth.
Aggravationstation@feddit.uk 7 months ago
Would the person who downvoted me please explain why?
bungle_in_the_jungle@lemmy.world 7 months ago
I don’t think it’s that straightforward though. Not saying your point is irrelevant, I can definitely see your point. But I feel like most of the Western world where the British government has no reach would have this same opinion.
grue@lemmy.world 7 months ago
American here; I think that’s because most of the rest of us have been fucked over by right-wing governments lately, too.
wewbull@feddit.uk 7 months ago
I’d take Major in a heartbeat over these cretins.