Correction related to a previous comment.
https://t.me/FinanceFactsTelegram/8
The difference between 2 years in Allianz is 33.4k € (2017-2019) = 1.4k € each month (which seems a bit more realistic ...) or 51.5k € (2019-2021) = 2.1k € (which seems less realistic, considering the COVID crisis ... but people still wasting less money for useless things ...) and not 150k € like previously wrote (because we confused gross and net graphics).
Probably the biggest difference is that Credit Suisse is the only who is considering this:
2158329/5.463 means 395k as ø or 2158329/(5.463-1.261) 513k by excluding those with less than 1000 CHF
Meanwhile difference of 2 years is 100k $ vs. 51.5k €, which is still HUGE! between Credit Suisse and Allianz just as examples. Switzerland is reporting that people save around 753 CHF each month if they live alone and 2.2 - 2.3k if they live in 2 (with or without kids), means 1.1k CHF in 2017. This is pretty identical to 2011 where the values were 740 / 1800 (means if you live in a family you can save 200-250 CHF more in 6 years ...).
Of the 1.1 million households with children under 25 years (29% of households) one-sixth consist of lone parents, most often (83%) single mothers.
Let we say a person is saving 1000 CHF (between 1 and 2 people families), this means 12-13k each year.
So in conclusion: you cannot trust any type of stats you see, even the swiss stats are not 100% true, but for sure Credit Suisse is telling bullshit. Smart people don't keep money at Credit Suisse at all and they don't keep money just on one bank.
https://t.me/FinanceFactsTelegram/8
The difference between 2 years in Allianz is 33.4k € (2017-2019) = 1.4k € each month (which seems a bit more realistic ...) or 51.5k € (2019-2021) = 2.1k € (which seems less realistic, considering the COVID crisis ... but people still wasting less money for useless things ...) and not 150k € like previously wrote (because we confused gross and net graphics).
Probably the biggest difference is that Credit Suisse is the only who is considering this:
2158329/5.463 means 395k as ø or 2158329/(5.463-1.261) 513k by excluding those with less than 1000 CHF
Meanwhile difference of 2 years is 100k $ vs. 51.5k €, which is still HUGE! between Credit Suisse and Allianz just as examples. Switzerland is reporting that people save around 753 CHF each month if they live alone and 2.2 - 2.3k if they live in 2 (with or without kids), means 1.1k CHF in 2017. This is pretty identical to 2011 where the values were 740 / 1800 (means if you live in a family you can save 200-250 CHF more in 6 years ...).
Of the 1.1 million households with children under 25 years (29% of households) one-sixth consist of lone parents, most often (83%) single mothers.
Let we say a person is saving 1000 CHF (between 1 and 2 people families), this means 12-13k each year.
So in conclusion: you cannot trust any type of stats you see, even the swiss stats are not 100% true, but for sure Credit Suisse is telling bullshit. Smart people don't keep money at Credit Suisse at all and they don't keep money just on one bank.