- May 1st to 5th, 2025 coincides with the International Workers' Day.
- On April 27, 2025, the company's management team went to the Hefei Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China and relevant provincial departments to give a work report.
- From April 22nd to April 26th, 2025, the company's management team conducted a working visit to Dubai.
- From April 13th to April 21st, 2025, the company's management team conducted working visits to Kuala Lumpur and Singapore.
- On April 6, 2025, the company's management team received a Panamanian company in Hefei for an inspection visit to Anhui. Relevant enterprises in Lujiang, Hefei and Wuhu were inspected respectively.
Home
>
News
>
Financial News
More
NEWS
Financial News
The survey showed that 31 is the most expensive age.
Turning 31 is going to cost a pretty penny.
That's the age when people are likely to spend the most money in their entire lives, shelling out up to $60,000 in that single year, according to a recent survey by credit score company ClearScore.
ClearScore surveyed 3,000 people aged 25 and over and had each outline their expenses for that year.
They found that 31-year-olds spent the most money, with the biggest expenses being getting married (27 percent), buying a house (25 percent), having a baby (20 percent) and paying for a honeymoon (14 percent).
According to the ClearScore study, 60 percent of the 31-year-old participants said they had enough savings to cover the added expenses themselves at that age, while 33 percent of 25 to 34-year-olds had to ask their parents to loan them the money.
In contrast, just 14 percent of people over 55 said their parents helped them financially at 31.
The findings also show that 31-year-olds still worry about saving money, particularly for retirement and having children, with 20 percent admitting they use credit cards for big purchases, compared to just 8 percent of people over 55.