Department Of Infrastructure And Transport

Thanks to the high dollar, Australians have become the world’s most savvy online bargain hunters. Parcels with cheaper DVDs from the US, computer games from Hong Kong and books from Britain now arrive on our shores in the thousands every day.

Virtual cars are far cheaper than real ones

Australian buyers obviously know how much they can save by shunning domestic retailers for their overseas competitors. Little wonder when, say, Steve Jobs’ biography is selling for $44 in Australia but for the equivalent of just $18 in Britain. Some British online retailers even offer free world-wide shipping.

What most Australians are probably unaware of is how much more they could save if it was possible to buy other goods internationally. Cars for example.

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  • Mark says:

    08:09pm | 18/12/11

    Actually I we are getting ripped off by overpopulating and choking ourselves into a corner, who cares about cars, raced them, fixed em and wasted too much money on them. We are getting overregulated because we are overpopulated. Read more »

  • james martel says:

    02:04pm | 17/12/11

    @ marley, the americans dont have julia gillard and the watermelon greens, though i think we will see obamas true colours if he wins a second term….. Read more »

 

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