We are a very credit dependent society. We buy things with money we are going to earn because they are 10% off and then charge them and have to pay 10, 15, or maybe even 25% interest on it. That makes NOOOOOO sense. I guess it's our society's "it will get better" attitude. But we are in need of a serious reality check and it starts with everyone individually looking out how they spend money and use credit.
I personally have a general rule about buying things: I don't pay for anything longer than I'm going to use it.
What does this mean?: Financing a car for 5 years is fine (but not ideal) because you're going to be using it in 5 years. Charging (which is the SAME THING as "financing") my Starbucks is not ok because I'll be paying for it after the 20 minutes I took to drink it. Now I'm not saying this is the perfect way to run your finances, but for someone starting out in the real world I don't think it's a bad start.
I think young Americans need to stop thinking about financing and finances like our parents' generation of "I can have it all now and pay for it later" baby boomers and start thinking like our grandparents' generation in a more "I'll buy when I can afford it" mentality.
I found this article on MSN Money that I think brings my point home: People need to learn to live on cash (meaning money in your checking account so your debit card is fine.)
Totally worth the read. :-)
Monday, December 8, 2008
Money Monday: WWGD (What Would Grandma Do)?
Posted by GBPPAngel at 11:15 AM
Labels: Budgeting, Money Monday
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