Exact(2)
(Poor attendances are a perennial Cup of Nations issue: it's not just high ticket prices, although that clearly doesn't help, but also the fact that most of the population has no disposable income – and so any price would be too high – and, as Mark Gleeson, the doyen of African football journalists, pointed out, the absence of a football-going culture in most of Africa).
Sarrah Laspa, a 29-year-old who has lived in London for seven years, regards rent as "wasted money" and would love to buy her own home, but has no disposable income left at the end of every month with which to save a deposit.
Similar(54)
His parents "were not desperately poor, but they had no disposable income," he recalled.
So I find myself in the opposite position of most of my peers – having no disposable income, but having disposable hours.
He had no disposable income -- indeed, he wasn't sure what I meant by disposable income; he barely had money for rent.
We have no disposable income.
It concluded that "income inequality has a sizeable and statistically negative impact on growth, and that redistributive policies achieving greater equality in disposable income has no adverse growth consequences.
It means that we have almost no disposable income and our finances are tight and we're barely saving, but after a bad experience with a home day care (I'm going to just say, "boa constrictors," and leave it at that), and with two more-than-full-time jobs, it's what we have to do.
Has having less disposable income made us want to go back to basics?
They don't have any disposable income; they're still disposing of ours.
Oh, to have an disposable income.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com