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Cost of living in German towns

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fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

Monograph

Identifikator:
866449027
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-93831
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Cost of living in German towns
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stat. Off.
Year of publication:
1908
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (LXI, 548 Seiten)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

MUNICH. 
375 
most double-family dwellings, and are of a very rude type. They are old 
without possessing historical or sentimental interest, and it is only their some 
what isolated situation in quieter parts of the city that has so far preserved them 
from extinction. They are constructed either of brick and plaster or of wood 
with a basis of brick, and in all probability they were erected a couple of 
centuries or more ago for the housing of labourers and others engaged on 
temporary works. Most of the “ Herbergen ” are in the rural style of 
architecture, with high gables, long sweeps of tiled roofs, and balconies running 
above one or two sides. As a rule these houses are very small, some of them, 
indeed, quite box-like contrivances ; the rooms are few and low, and the 
general internal arrangements primitive to a degree. The peculiarity about 
them is that up to a recent date they were all owned by their tenants, and this 
holds good even now of the majority, though the municipal authority is 
gradually buying out those owners whose property is flagrantly defective. In 
a majority of cases each story has a different owner, an arrangement which 
does not always facilitate harmonious relationships. Normal sanitary conditions 
cannot be said to prevail amongst the inhabitants of the “ Herbergen,” though 
on the other hand these houses are said to have enjoyed immunity from 
infectious disease when ocher neighbourhoods have suffered. A number of the 
tenants are small handicraftsmen who carry on their callings at home, in rooms 
which serve at once for working, living, and sleeping, in one case observed 
the odd arrangement existed of a bedroom being let by day to a cobbler while 
the tenants were away working in another part of the city. 
The following Table summarises the rents of working-class dwellings, as 
obtained for the purpose of this report :— 
Predominant Rents of Working-class Dwellings. 
Number of Rooms per Tenement. 
Predominant Weekly Rents. 
One room 
Two rooms 
Three rooms 
Is. Gd. to 2s. 4d. 
3s. to 4s. 
4s. Gd. to 5s. 9d. 
There is no great difference in the rents of working-class houses as 
between one part of the city and another, since Munich is without a clearly 
defined “ Old Town ” in the sense that Dresden or Aachen has it. 
Dent in Berlin being represented by 100, the corresponding figure for 
Munich is 62. 
The only direct local tax which is paid by the working classes is the 
income tax, but there are indirect consumption taxes in the form of octroi. 
The local income tax forms a percentage of the State income tax, which in 
Bavaria is payable by all incomes without exemption limit, though it falls 
lightly upon persons of small earnings. Taking the local super-tax at 130 
per cent., the total income tax paid by the working classes would fall within the 
following ranges :— 
Class. 
Income. 
1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
10 
11 
Up to £25 
£25 and under £37 10s 
£37 10s. 
£45 
£52 10s. 
£60 
£70 
£80 
£90 
£100 
£110 
£45 
£5210s 
£60 .. 
£70 .. 
£80 .. 
£90 .. 
£100 .. 
£110 .. 
£120 .. 
State Income 
Tax. 
Municipal 
Super-tax. 
s. d. 
0 6 
8 0 
10 0 
12 0 
15 0 
s. d. 
Exempted 
3 11 
5 2 
6 6 
7 10 
10 5 
13 0 
15 7 
19 6 
Total. 
s. d. 
0 6 
1 0 
2 0 
6 11 
9 2 
11 6 
13 10 
18 5 
23 0 
27 7 
34 6 
For some years rents have been fairly stationary in Munich, and so long 
as the supply exceeds the demand, which it does at the present time, it is 
unlikely that any serious change will take place.
	        

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