The Cairns Post

Tough times nothing new for 98-year-old

- SOPHIE ELSWORTH

JACK Alsbury lived through the Great Depression and can still vividly recall what tough times were like.

“I was a paperboy. I was delivering Herald newspapers and I was selling Footy Records at age seven at the footy to help my uncle out,” the 98-year-old said.

“I had to give all my money to my mother to help her get by.”

As many Australian­s grapple with the financial fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic, there have been comparison­s with the tough economic times of the 1930s.

Mr Alsbury remembers the financial hardship he experience­d as a child.

After he left school at 13, he was working a 44-hour week earning a wage of 10 shillings per week making inner soles for shoes.

“We didn’t eat much,” said the World War II veteran.

“It was so hard financiall­y – it was terrible. When I changed jobs and got to 15 shillings a week, we had nothing really.

“We used to make footballs out of rolled-up newspapers. If anybody owned a tennis ball they were a really good friend.”

Fast forward to today and Mr Alsbury, a great-great-grandfathe­r, said there had been some damaging behaviours that had hit our hip pockets hard and left many people in financial turmoil.

“Credit cards – I don’t believe in those … people are stupid using those,” he said.

“Money seems nothing to people these days and there’s been too many government handouts. We never had them.” Mr Alsbury is on a Department of Veterans’ Affairs pension and has been retired for 40 years.

He said he was financiall­y comfortabl­e after saving hard his whole life.

Crown Money Management chief executive officer Scott Parry said older people “are the best people to learn from because they know what it takes to get through times like this”.

‘We used to make footballs out of rolled-up newspapers’ Retiree Jack Alsbury, 98

“It’s the old school messages, such as ‘cash is king’, ‘don’t buy things you can’t afford’, ‘live within your means’,” he said.

“These days you have credit cards, the Afterpays. We are making spending so much easier and these old generation­s didn’t have this entitled mentality.

“The older ones worked long hours just to try and get food on the table and get the essentials.”

Mr Parry said his advice to clients during this tough time was to distinguis­h between their wants and needs.

“Wants are luxuries at the moment,” he said. “You have got to focus on the essentials, such as food on the table, health and, as a result, being able to get through this.”

Mr Parry said having a safety net was critical, as was slashing bill expenses, such as utility and telco costs, by phoning up your provider and asking for a better deal.

 ??  ?? ADVICE: Jack Alsbury, 98, lived through the hardships of the 1930s. Picture: Lachie Millard
ADVICE: Jack Alsbury, 98, lived through the hardships of the 1930s. Picture: Lachie Millard

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