Shopping In Amsterdam

Amsterdam is a wonderland for shoppers because shopping here is real fun.It is a city full of variety and unique things that makes it an ideal shopping destination. Here you will find both small unique shops offering you things that you will not find in shops of any other big city and big super markets where you can get all big brands. It is a city where you can shop best of jewellery, books,antiques,second-hand antiques and diamonds.

Some of the best shopping streets in Amsterdam are -:

Kalverstaar

It is the most popular and busiest shopping street of the city. Here you will discover the market crowded with shoppers and shops selling competitively priced products. The best part is that there is no traffic only shoppers. Here you will find many malls and several big department stores also.

P.C. Hooftstraat

Here you will discover the best shops of the town and beautiful architecture. The street is in neighbourhood to national museaum of Amsterdam. Here you will find all big brands, all luxury items. It is the most expensive and Posh market. You will get the best choice in luxury items whether you are looking for clothes, shoes or cosmetics.

Cornelis Schuytstraat

This beautiful street is located near P.C. Hooftstraat. The street is also for expensive shopping. Here you will find the best food, wine, cosmetics, good cafes, several designers shops and Amsterdam best Flower shop.

Utrechtsestraat

It is also one of the most busiest streets in Amsterdam with numerous shops offering design items, gadgets, shoes, clothes and also best records shop of the city. Shopping here is fun with narrow sidewalks, traffic and busy restaurants, food wine shops making the place busy and full of life.

Beethovenstraat – Situated in the south of Amsterdam, it is the most elegamt, modern and convenient to visit street in comparison to other streets. Here you will find good shops for clothes, wine and chocolates and food. Here you will find the best sushi in the town.

Shop Opening time

Mondays – 1-6pm.

Tuesday to Friday – 9/10am -6pm.

On Saturdays most of the shops closed early. If you are looking to shop on Sundays, you can shop in city centre, Damrak, Leidsestraat etc

History of Vancouver’s Real Estate Market

1981In 1981 there was a significant real estate market bubble. Back then, home buyers were faced with skyrocketing interest rates nearing 20%, and an annualized inflation rate of 12.5%. The unemployment rate was at 13%. This was the baby boomer period that saw a rise in demand for real estate.The housing prices at that time were of course almost 1/10th of what they are today, but the baby boomer bulge that stampeded into the housing market was also faced with increased closing costs. More than 20% of the homes bought were sold within 6 weeks, indicating a number of investors trying to realize a profit though a quick flip. A profit they wouldn’t see for years to come. The demographic shift led to prices being pushed up, and we can see afterwards from 1981 the market cooling off, or the bubble bursting. The market softened for about 7 years before it saw another significant spike.1990This year saw a drop of sales ranging from 20-25%. Those who invested back then, could only now realize an appreciation of their asset up to 5.3%. Interest rates in 1990 were also very unfavourable, topping somewhere near 14-15% for 1 and 5 year mortgage rates. The average price for a home was about $220,000-230,000. When the housing bubble burst, there was a national default rate of 0.28%.1990 was also the beginning of an increasingly strong housing market. Vancouver’s population as shown on the graph began to rise. It is estimated that about 14% of the properties bought at that time were sold within 6 weeks, indicating another frenzy of flipped properties and increased prices. The index of affordability was near 65%. There was a less dramatic jump in average prices compared to 1981, and a more modest levelling off until mid 1990′s.1998The housing market around this period was faced with a number of issues. The leaky condo crisis and the Asian Contagion both played a major role in Vancouver’s real estate market. MLS records have shown the number of sales only amounted to 16,000. Although 1998 was the beginning of a steadily increasing upswing, we will take a look at what brought the market into a slump.Real estate prices peaked in 1995 and the market saw a correction in the following four years. The market activity was exacerbated by the world economic environment. The ‘Asian Contagion’ began in Japan when lending institutions were stuck with bad loans. They were slow to react and couldn’t take decisive action.An inflation bubble occurred and they went into deep recession that also hurt overseas investors who held investment securities, and their economy went bust. The Asian financial crisis triggered the Russian financial crisis, and this domino effect brought worldwide economic trouble. We can see on the graph that around that time, real estate prices had bottomed out.The leaky condo crisis also brought demand down for detached homes, as households weren’t able to sell their condos and afford to make such a move. The world economy crisis led developers to capitalize on the market taking a dive, which in turn led to the reduced quality of housing structure.They didn’t build up to code which caused water to ingress through the roof, on top of unsuitable installation of membranes around the building envelope. This problem cost millions of dollars, forcing owners to shell out nearly $70,000 which they couldn’t afford.1999-2008Instead of isolating a specific year between this time period, it would be more functional to analyze all the events that led to a massive increase in home prices that we now face today. After the events surrounding 1998, there was a lot of pent up demand for housing that started a chain reaction with homebuyers.Sales of detached/ attached homes, and apartments increased 16% within a year, leading to a healthy recovery in the resale housing market. Interprovincial migration was also a factor in increased market activity, a net flow BC hasn’t seen for two years. In 2001, the Federal Government decreased capital gains taxes from 75%-50% to promote investing and increase sales volumes.In 2004, Greater Vancouver’s real estate market was impacted by record breaking activity. The continuing pent up demand, low interest rates, and word that Vancouver won the bid for the 2010 Olympics put the GVRD on the map as one of the hottest real estate markets to invest in, especially in Canada. All of this activity led to a burst of new home construction, seeing a 33% increase over the same period the previous year, or more significantly, a 137% spike from five years ago.In fall of 2007, real estate prices were at its peak. The benchmark price for a detached home was at an unheard of $771,250 according to MLS Link Housing Price Index. Sales in 2007 were upwards of 38,000. As we can see on the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver’s graph, the average home price for 2008 was $825,206.Vancouver’s growing economy, rising incomes, increased immigration, and higher employment had the market in a healthy position, but it began to cool down in the following months. The GVRD is still bound by its limited land base, surrounded by mountains, water and agricultural land reserve. The recession is also a determining factor as to why the prices are beginning to level off, and affordability is marginally improving as we enter a buyer’s market.

The Impact of Working From Home

Very few people who work for a boss give any real thought to the impact that working for themselves from home would have on them. People get used to their lives, we are creatures of habit, messing with your job or even thinking of it especially in the current economic climate can be a scary prospect. Yet, many of these same people struggle on a daily basis to fulfill their obligations and hold down their jobs and fulfill the requirements for that too. Yet think about it. It is not yourself you are going through those hassles for, it is for your employer!An All Too Common Scenario of ParentsA single parent is the obvious employee that comes to mind. Perhaps someone with very poor family support, so the plan and care they have put in place for childcare it has to work or else their day is thrown into chaos and uncertainty.A sick child, unable to go to school is an immediate problem they often have no way of resolving. Working from home, you not only cut the stress factor of putting your sick child into the care of other people, but when needed you can take a day off at a moment’s notice to tend to such things as they happenCommuting.Commuting and often the time and cost involved in that can be a nightmare. We all hear horror stories of the inefficiency of the Train service and the chaos of the Tubes. A good chunk of people’s wages can be take merely by making it into work and back because they have to commute. That is somewhat a little self defeating when it comes to earning your pay which is supposed to be to keep you and yours and not a good part of it given back indirectly to your boss by travel fares to get into work.Stress ReliefWorking from home will immediately lower your stress levels. Your overall health will improve through that factor alone. If you have a job that is making you depressed, stressed, sleep deprived or a combination of any and all of the above then work is taking far too much from you than it is supposed to do.Be HappierWith your stress reduced and relieved you will be happier, more motivated and have a lot more energy. You will also become a lot more confident. You will actually start to enjoy your work rather than it being a drudge. This will have a knock on effect for your business; you will do better in it and end up making more money. You can easily make multiple times a month what your current employer is paying you without any of the same hassles. You will have the time to do the things you want to do; and spend time with the people you love best, rather than fitting them in around your current employers work schedule.FreedomDoes the above sound good to you? Do you fit any of the scenarios above or any similar ones you want to tell us about in the comments? What good reason do you have for not giving yourself a break, enabling you to live a happier, stress free, life, who only has to answer to yourself? Of course no one is going to pack in a job to start a home based business. But people can do both until they see the rewards of their home business paying off and until they are earning enough to give up their present job and make running their own business their full time job.What’s holding you back? I will be happy to answer any questions or queries for you. Check this link out, and see if this is not something you could do, just a few hours a week to start with is all it takes, as long as that is consistent. Taking control of our life back starts when we do not depend on anyone else for our survival. What would you do if you lost your current job? These are all relevant questions to consider.