Search for:

Tuesday 6th May 2008

Print
Email
Text size
Comment

Credit crunch hits City spending

City professionals are split down the middle when it comes to their plans to curb their personal spending, according to a survey from recruitment network eFinancialCareers. Almost half of respondents (48 per cent) are planning major cutbacks, while the remainder are more confident in their ability to sustain past levels of spending.

More than a quarter of all respondents (26 per cent) are looking at cancelling holidays, while 13 per cent are considering selling their houses and nine per cent are thinking of taking their children out of private school.

The balance (52 per cent) say the impact of lower bonuses will be minor, forcing them merely to ‘cut back on the caviar’.

Sarah Butcher, editor of eFinancialCareers.com, comments: ‘Our survey reveals that around half the financial services community can survive a few lean years with only superficial changes to their lifestyle.

‘For the other half, however, smaller bonuses are a serious prospect. Forced house sales and holiday cancellations could have a serious impact on the economy of the South East.’

Comments [0]

User Comments

There are currently no comments on this post.

 

Related Articles


People who read this article also read ...

Related sections

Interesting links

 

Other Finance

August-TMN deal falls through
Deal Round-up (15.07.2008)
Smoothie business to raise £500,000
Funding for breast cancer detection

Editor's Pick

As entrepreneurs like Reggae Reggae sauce founder Levi Roots have discovered, getting your product into supermarkets can turbo-charge your sales. GrowthBusiness talks to Roots and other business owners about how it's done.
 

Advice

How to float on AIM
Corporate hospitality
Managing your wealth

Growth Issues

Delisting: the great escape
Doing business in Russia
UK businesses in India
Would you float on AIM?
No chance
Maybe in the future
We're already listed

Research

Powering a renewable revolution
How to improve your year-end numbers
Strong deal flow to continue in mid-market
  Job Vacancies | About Us | Contact | Disclaimer | Copyright | Privacy Policy |Site Map