I know plenty of people who are using almost everything they earn to support their lifestyle. Some do it because they earn so little, they can't afford to do anything else with it! Others do so because they want much more than they actually need, and they earn a salary high enough to afford wants as well as needs, so they spend all their "excess" money on those luxuries.
That's where the trap comes in for everybody, but particularly for higher-earning individuals and families. They're committed to repaying hire-purchase accounts, credit card bills, leases, and what have you. They've used their surplus income to "bring forward" consumption that they'd otherwise have had to put off until they managed to save enough to buy it. Instead of saving money, they borrow money in order to spend even more. Psychology Today examines this behavior.
For decades, America has operated on a simple yet precarious principle: Borrow from tomorrow to pay for today. This mindset, deeply embedded in our economic systems and individual behaviors, has created a teetering tower of debt that threatens to collapse under its own weight. As a nation, we've normalized living beyond our means—from federal deficit spending to consumer credit card debt—with seemingly little consideration for the inevitable reckoning.
. . .
The national debt has grown exponentially rather than linearly, suggesting that each generation has become more comfortable leveraging the future than its predecessor.
. . .
Historical evidence suggests that debt-fueled economies eventually face correction. The 2008 financial crisis provided a preview of what happens when leveraged systems begin to unravel. Yet instead of fundamentally restructuring our approach, we responded with even more borrowing and financial engineering.
There's more at the link.
The problem is that such spending habits last only as long as there's money to spend. I'm seeing more and more cases where income is suddenly cut off (as in being fired, or made redundant) or greatly reduced (getting a new job, but having to accept a much lower wage or salary than you made in the old job). Having weighed oneself down with debt and spending patterns based on a higher income, suddenly one is faced with creditors demanding repayment, vehicles being repossessed, and all the other burdens of an over-leveraged household. Kids whine when they're told they can't have all they're used to, spouses blame each other for the sudden hole in their finances, and in some cases families break down altogether under the strain.
Karl Denninger sums up the problem.
The real problem for ordinary people in the economy is that anything that is unsustainable over a sufficient amount of time will blow up in your face. But when will it blow up? That's a more-difficult problem. For example we know that housing is largely locked up in a large part of the country -- indeed, most of it. In those places where it sort-of-isn't there are other serious problems including property tax and insurance concerns that might as well have it locked up from a standpoint of actual affordability. Add to this that many formerly thought of as "safe" professions which earn a nice wage, including computer science and medical, are rapidly being destroyed in terms of forward earnings capacity by both AI and foreign worker imports. There are plenty of stories already of people living quite high on the hog having accumulated a lifestyle with mandatory monthly spend commensurate with $250,000 wages suddenly being laid off and finding no replacement for that wage at even half what they formerly made. If you've managed to get yourself into a leveraged position with a forward requirement for such earnings and they disappear you're in very serious trouble indeed.
Again, more at the link.
Just this week (so far) I've heard from friends and acquaintances fighting that very issue. Examples:
- A family has been reduced from three cars to one, because they couldn't afford the lease payments, insurance, etc. for the two very nice vehicles used by father and mother. The remaining old beater had been given to their teenage son, but he's had to give it back to the family. Neither he nor they are very happy about that.
- Two families are urgently seeking low-cost rental accommodation because their nice big McMansion-style houses are being repossessed. They're finding it almost impossible to locate anything as nice as what they had, and even lesser houses are more expensive to rent than they had anticipated. It's gotten to the point of screaming fights with their kids because they're going to have to share two rooms, one for the boys and one for the girls, rather than each have their own space.
- Two families have had to give up their pets to shelters for (hopefully) adoption. It's been a real trauma, particularly for the children, as they can't be sure their pets will go to loving homes where they'll be properly cared for.
- I know too many people who are using one credit card to pay off another each month, never reducing what they owe.
With those problems fresh in mind, you can bet that my wife and I are checking on our monthly expenses to make sure we can fit into a reasonable budget, and keep our heads above water if any sort of financial emergency hits. Recent medical bills would have made that very problematic, except that you, dear readers, came to our rescue last year, to our deep and abiding gratitude. Even so, it's up to us to use what we have wisely, and not waste it. We also made a decision early in our marriage to get out of debt as far as possible (following Dave Ramsay's advice), and pay cash for routine expenses wherever possible, and pay off our credit cards and other accounts in full every month rather than accumulate a balance, and save money in an emergency fund. Those decisions have been a Godsend for us, sparing us more than a little worry.
I guess more and more of us are going to be facing this conundrum as prices increase and jobs become harder to find. It's a good time for all of us to take stock of where we are, what we're spending, and how we might cope if similar problems rear their ugly heads in our lives. If you have helpful suggestions that might help others to do that, please share them in Comments.
Peter
I faced the problem of a sudden drop in income 15 years ago. It took 5 years to pay off my credit cards, but it happened. That’s a good feeling. Learned my lesson and I am much better at money management now 😃
ReplyDeleteThe first step is to ignore the media both the shows and the ads around them, and that goes double for 'social' media. Having the latest model phone, newest athletic shoes, clothes, car, etc. won't buy happiness. Once you are out of the status rat-race you can focus on adjusting your spending to be below you income which brings a whole level of tranquility to your lives.
ReplyDeleteDickens said it over a century ago in David Copperfield - “Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen and six , result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result misery”
I had a credit card. I'd had that card for twenty years. At some points I ran a balance, but more often paid it off every month. 2008 came along and the card issuer, BofA, DOUBLED the interest on the card. Why? Because OTHER people were defaulting on theirs! I protested. I was told to siddown and shuddup. I cancelled the card. A few years later, I got another card just for emergencies. I never used it. It sat in the safe. The issuer said "Use the card or we're cancelling it." I told THEM to siddown and shuddup. I haven't had a credit card in over twenty years. My house is my only debt, and I've reached a point where I could actually pay it off with available funds if I had to or wanted to. When necessary, I buy well-cared for used cars for CASH. My "smart" phone, a Samsung Xcover Pro, is six years old, and has a replaceable battery. You read that right; A REPLACEABLE BATTERY. This phone is still in production!. Contrary to the likes of Verizon, you DO NOT need the latest "smart" phone if all you're doing is making calls, texting, and engaging in light internet use.
ReplyDeleteMuch of what you think you NEED is actually just stuff that you WANT. Be honest with yourself, both with your income and expenses, and spend accordingly.
Debt is nothing less than SLAVERY. get debt-free... NOW!
I don't care a fig about the 'official' interest rate on my credit cards, the ACTUAL rate on a card with no carried balance is zero. I have a Costco membership and their Visa card (to get their rebates) plus one more where I can earn points. I pay them in full every month, I haven't paid interest to a credit card company in decades. As long as I use them the issuers are happy.
DeleteI have a goal to put 10% of my income in investments. This gives me a margin and a way to build a buffer. Sometimes 10% isnt possible, and if so I save what I can, if at all possible. Doing that means that you start looking at your disposable income as after those savings.
ReplyDeleteWhen I look over my budget, I use a MoScoW list, what i Must have, Should have, and Want to have. Then it is easy to look over and see what i really need and what is something I can easily live without if i have to. The Want to have are things that are easy to cut if the economic situation changes, and if it is too much now I might want to skip a few of those anyway.
For instance, a slightly cheaper car would move it from the W column to S column, and could if needed be replaced with a beater to go into the M column. It makes it simpler to keep perspektive.
As far as I'm concerned, Pete is correct. Debt is Slavery or Indentured Servitude.
ReplyDeleteI could never get that message through to my spousal unit. So when he passed away, we had 9 dollars and 14 cents in the checking account until my pension check came at the first of the month; we were living hand-to-mouth. Unless you are BOTH on the same page money-wise, you will not achieve financial security (peace).
Today, I am debt-free, got a reliable vehicle, a decent place to live in a reasonably safe neighborhood, and when medical expenses come up, I can pay the bill. I save at least 10% of my pensions for my one-off annual and medical expenses. Once a year I write down everything (do a spreadsheet) looking at where my money went and where I can trim unnecessary spending (it always creeps in). Then, I make an annual budget and try to stick to it as best I can.
Agree with PF; I got that attitude from my parents, back when it was all hire purchase. Credit cards do have a benefit; you pay the balance off every month so it remains a free loan, and that means you can keep a sum equal to your monthly outgoings in a savings account earning a bit of interest.
ReplyDeleteOne of the criticisms I see from people about Dave Ramsey is that his advice won't help you "grow wealth". Well, yeah, but that's not what "financial freedom" is about. Financial freedom is about being able to say "take this job and shove it" or "if X expense comes up I'm not going to have to go into debt for it."
ReplyDeleteIt is best to be wealthy and free, but it is better to be poor and free than wealthy and chained.
When the hidden cost of inflation drastically cuts the spending power of income, the results can cause severe economic strain on all budgets. Those living on the edge might find it's crumbling, and a fall is imminent.
ReplyDeleteVery early in our long, long ,long, long, long marriage, my wife and I decided that we would live on whatever unemployment paid at the time. It's easy to look that up, even back then.
ReplyDeleteThat has kept us above water all these years, the money I made above that we saved. And spent as needed. Once both kids finished college we were actually able to save money.
I retired at 61 because we managed our money well.
Certainly not rich, but comfortable.
If you are carrying credit card debt, snowball it.
Work on paying off the highest interest rate card first.
Once paid off, add that payment to the next highest rate.
Once paid off add both payments to the next one.
Amazing how fast you can get out of debt.
But the FIRST thing to do is STOP SPENDING.
Being out of debt is the best plan.. It took me 25 years to finally pay off the mortgage on the house but felt great when I did. I have a lot of credit cards. if you pay it off every month no issue. Normally I do and have except one period of time back long ago... that was a slog to pay off.
ReplyDeleteLately with all the health issues I was getting notices about missed payments because I wasn't being timely in paying bills. nothing that went to the credit rating.. I would get it paid but it was stressful. I had enough in the bank that I setup minimum auto payments in case I didn't get to stuff due to not feeling good or whatever. This helped the late notices but not the issue of being sick and not getting to the bills. Bills that weren't minimums such as power and insurance and internet etc.. we set to autopay on the appropriate credit card. The fundamental issue of forgetting or being sick and just not getting to it hasn't gone away. Hopefully something happens with the dozens of dr appointments and tests over the last few months that can give me energy again. The last two times I have paid bills have been more quarterly or longer than monthly. This brings up minimum payments and interest. I haven't looked at my interest rates in years but it can't be to horrible as I had a 10,000 dollar balance the last go around and the interest payment was 60 dollars at the highest. luckily I have enough income that even if the balances build up to 20,000 cumulatively I have been able to pay all balances down to 0 when I do pay them. I'm worried though as modern tech and processes for paying bills.. well I guess any processes whether tech or not are getting harder to do, and feeling sick or in lots of pain or now lately vertigo just messes with my discipline and get what needs to be done attitude that I have had all my life.
this last year we have been pushing to take care of big ticket items like extending the old septic leach field and fixing the broken lid on the distribution box to it. 1700... great price and the guy that came out did an amazing job. New roof... 12,000 not a great price for our small house but best it seemed I was going to get. luckly the reviews of the company were not made up and they were the most put together and competent roofers I have ever seen. I have done roofs my self and they came in with 9 people at 7 am and left at 1:30 pm that afternoon, setup, roof and cleanup and did a great job on all accounts.
I am still earning some money even sick doing mostly remote work. Wife started working 5 years ago after kids got old enough. it has helped financially that between the two of us we are doing better than I was on my own before health start having issues.
With current issues and my not good financial outlook due to health we are doing our best to fix all the major potential or needed repairs etc.. during this time period so that if shit goes south we can coast for a long time on minimal income. Lots of fruit bushes, trees and vines getting planted this year on top of all the ones that are already there. Garden going back in. Need to get a couple reliable older cars to replace what we are using right now... that or repair some of the dead ones in the yard. Repair is starting to look cheaper than even buying used.
If we had lots of debt it wouldn't look good for us in the near or long term. If you can pay it down as quick as you can. It really does help.
just me rambling on... sigh...
Agree with Peter... nuff said.
ReplyDeleteMy wife and I were incredibly fortunate to have had careers with our state's Museum Commission. We were able to use Deferred Compensation to begin Roth IRAs for retirement, which have grown quite well. We haven't touched them and probably won't until compelled to. We were able to retire at 61, both with over 30 years, with the house paid off (a 3 bed mid century modern in central PA), both cars paid off, all student debt retired for our two kids. Our formula, eat at home, cut your own grass, shovel your snow, learn enough to fix minor home repairs, drink tap water, etc. And don't give a rip what the neighbors say or think.
ReplyDeleteSome years ago I was talking to a local mechanic about buying a Honda to replace a GMC SUV. He replied "you will like them, All I do with Hondas is oil jobs and brakes". I now have two; one is 14 years old and the other is 15. Both are very reliable (don't really care for timing belt replacement every 100K) . If and when they die I can easily replace with cash.
ReplyDeleteRamsey's rant against credit cards slams his readers with being spendthrifts with no discipline. One of my cc gives a 15 cent discount per gallon, and another had enough credits that I could get a Weber grill. No interest or fees involved
I've never been able to count on having money in the future (long story), so I do not buy things I can't pay for in full, in cash, at the time of purchase.
ReplyDeleteThe folks that " live up to their income" confuse debt with being rich. Debt is a useful tool in business and a cruel master for individuals.
ReplyDeleteIt can be a useful tool for individuals as well, you just have to keep it on a leash.
DeleteThere was a meme before there were memes: "Can I pay my Visa with my Mastercard?" The answer was yes and we lived that for far too long. We were lucky in bankruptcy. Our debt was spread so far around that no one creditor could do much. Some of that was state-specific bankruptcy laws. We kept our house, we kept our vehicles. Lost most everything else including credit rating (the laws have changed since then and I think credit rating is more important now). We were lucky - we were young enough to not only recover but to benefit from lessons learned. Helped that we were both professionals with professional incomes. I don't think there are any "helpful" suggestions. Suffer now getting out of the hole or suffer even more when the hole finally collapses on you.
ReplyDeleteMuch of staying out of financial trouble is living BELOW your max alleged "status" by at least 15 to 20%, Depending on income, this ranges from unpleasant to impossible dependant particularly on local cost of living. My wife and I are probably solidly in the upper decile of income for US, but living in Massachusetts the cost of living (especially housing( can be rough. So we live in a MUCH smaller home than many of our peers keeping a mortgage likely 2/3s or less than that of many of our peers, but in a town/district with excellent schools. The mortgage getting to low (3.25%) rates allowed us to switch to a 15 year mortgage and pay things off 2 years ahead of time, particularly useful because my job went away at 63 and basically after a few months of searching it was clear there was little work in my field for folks over 40 let alone 60+. We pay off the one credit card every month, and have been doing so since the early 90's when a lucky windfall let us close out our credit balances. We buy used Honda/Subaru (with occasional rare exceptions of New) and pay them off in 4-5 years. We then use them for at least another 7-10 (e.g. my wife drives a used Civic DX of 2012 vintage), many peers lease Audi/BMW/Volvo on 36 month leases that are probably 50% more than our payment on the Civic (which payments ended mid 2018), they keep rolling things over. We have saved 3-4 months cash equivalent to our full income for those periods over 20 years This we tap ONLY for capital work (House maintenance, repairs, emergency expenditures) if at all possible. Of course much of this is predicated on our having had good luck and my wife having a position which has excellent health care.
ReplyDeleteThe big issue is if you live right at the limits and the feces hit the whirling blades you're in a world of hurt. This has happened to us a couple times and each time our frugality and savings have let us weather it with limited belt tightening for a while. Not pleasant but we weren't looking at people taking the house or cars, just losing some optional spending.