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Living expenses
Living expenses are very individual and depend on what kind of
lifestyle you were used to in your home country. The wise habit of
most students is “to save money wherever possible”. This is
particularly important for Sydney conditions where every-day
expenses are slightly higher then anywhere else in Australia.
Everything has its advantages and disadvantages
Public Transport
Public transport expenses depend
on area where you live and obviously on your destination. You can
choose from various means of transport such as trains, buses, light
rail (similar to a tram), ferries and monorail which is railway
built above the street level. Various travel passes and discount
tickets are available throughout the whole Sydney area that is
divided into travel zones. Students usually buy tickets for combined
transport covering both train and bus, which cost around 30 AUD a
week.
Accommodation
The prices for accommodation depend on area and the kind you are
looking for. Students usually share accommodation with other
students of different nationalities to improve their fluency of
English.The rent in the City or its surrounding costs around 100 AUD
per person per week. Accommodation in the suburbs of Sydney (that
are only about 20 minutes away by train) the price may as low as 50
AUD per person per week. The average price is around 80 AUD per
person per week.
Food
To take meals here in Sydney
might be expensive but might be also cheap, depending on your choice
of cuisine and the standard. Obviously cooking at home is cheaper
than having meals in restaurants. If you prefer home cooking you
might find very tasty 2 minutes noodles, pasta, beans, sausages,
salami, frozen vegetables etc. Besides regular classic food you can
also buy very cheap so called “low price” products that are of the
same quality but in cheap packaging such as Home brand, Savings, No
Frills, Farmland etc. and they are half priced.
For fruit lovers there is very popular and famous Paddy’s market
that has a great variety with a predominantly Asian style. There you
can buy cheap fruit and vegetables from Thursday to Sunday. The most
convenient time to go shopping there is at 5.15 p.m. on Sunday. At
5.15 p.m. there is fierce competition for really good bargains. The
sellers shout “One dollar, One dollar, One dollar a box…” and people
run and buy everything they thing they need before it goes rotten.
You can pay one dollar for 8 oranges, a big watermelon, rock melon
or 12 apples. Does Australia seem to be expensive country?
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