Car, by defination, can neither be considered as investment nor is an accessory.
Is there a rule of thumb to estimate the max car value I can affort based on income ?
I know this is a generic question. So let's assume certain factors:
. Income is as of above-avg. desi-canadian with possible (not certain) income growth in future.
. Family size, small-to-medium - say a 1-2 kid with parents.
. Car is a need.
. Existance of other financial family requirements: rrsp, resp, home, vacation expenses, etc.
From my views, the car purchase value should be no more than 40% of gross annual income.
What do our community believe ?
For average family
CIVIC/Corolla
If you are a little bit more comfortable with $$
Accord/ Camry
If you are very comfotable with dollars
BMW/Benz
What is your comfort level
-----------------------------------------------------------------
We will find a way or we will make one
Quote:
Originally posted by Smiley
What is your comfort level
Quote:
Originally posted by l5a
Person1 could have got a new car.
Is Person2's choice of new car a wise decision ? Keeping in mind that he does not have a home and have two aged parents ?
What could be the disadvantages (short-term and long-term) in both the cases ?
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Recommended Services- Servicedomino.com
http://www.servicedomino.com
My thinking is very similar to Smiley on this issue. Buying a car in Canada in Canada is like buying an Elephant. Eventhough the Elephant might be cheap, the small needle which is used to control it(it is called ankhusham) is expensive; it is the same way the insurance is costlier than the car.
I've spoken to many Car Driving School instructors and also many mechanics from Canadian Tire to Midas to local Desis. The onething I found in common was their praise for the Toyota Corollas Engine and smoothness/resale value of the Honda Civic. Typically the Phillipino or others will not touch the Corolla when you try to sell it to them as the Corolla is a Taxi model driven in their country.
Based on the Driving Schools my vote for the best engine(350,000Kms maintenance free) is the Corolla; while an equivalent car with better resale value is the Honda Civic. Both are extremely good on GAS.
If somebody wants to spend a few K's less but not expect the same resale value then a Nissan Sentra/Altima or Mazda would do the job. You would be able to bargain with a Nissan or Mazda salesman while you would not have the same bargaining power with Toyota or Honda salesman.
My suggestion would be a Toyota Corolla or a Honda Civic to start with and the second car could be Camry or an Accord or if not a Toyota Sienna or a Honda Odyssey.
This is my take on it.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Speech by Thomas Friedman of The New York Times....
"When we were young kids growing up in America, we were told to eat our
vegetables at dinner and not leave them. Mothers said, 'think of the
starving children in India and finish the dinner.' And now I tell my
children: 'Finish your maths homework. Think of the children in India
who would make you starve, if you don't.'"
Quote:
Originally posted by jake3d
A yardstick I apply is the car has to last 1 yr for every 1000$ I spend.
Sankaracharya,
Good analysis. As a proud Toyota Corolla owner i am proud of your statement and of the car.
I bought mine from a dealer in July 2004 for $6750 basic ( i paid 15% on tax +200 or so for registration and plate). It is a 1999 model and had 136K when i bought it. The reason that i got it so cheap was b'cos it was an accident car (i never cared to find out what kind of accident it was). He cheated me in a sense, b'cos he took the money in cash and then wrote $5750 in the receipt (basic). So i guess the real value was only that.
The car has been good, no troubles with it at all.
TK
Sidenote : since i use canadian tire for all repairs (they ask for GST/PST, environmental charge etc...), i typically have spent $200 a year on repairs, oil change etc... for 2 years now. if i used a private garage then this will reduce by atleast 30-40%. Once Canadian Tyre cheated me and changed the timing belt (with my permission but they charged me 200% more than what they told me) and they said that they repaired my brake shoe(without my permission). the bill for that and the oil change was $270.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
I am a Gents and not a Ladies.
Advertise Contact Us Privacy Policy and Terms of Usage FAQ Canadian Desi © 2001 Marg eSolutions Site designed, developed and maintained by Marg eSolutions Inc. |