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- Newsgroups: misc.consumers
- Path: sparky!uunet!ftpbox!mothost!lmpsbbs!markr
- From: markr@mot.com (Mark Rindsberg)
- Subject: Re: middle class/affording a house
- Reply-To: markr@mcil.comm.mot.com
- Organization: MCIL, Tel Aviv
- Distribution: na
- Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1992 12:17:39 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Jul22.121739.24413@lmpsbbs.comm.mot.com>
- References: <1200@stake.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Sender: news@lmpsbbs.comm.mot.com (Net News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: 145.9.14.26
- Lines: 81
-
- In article <1200@stake.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> emolinar@stake.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Elizabeth Molinaro) writes:
- >
- > What has amazed me about this conversation is that (aside from what I
- >will say) only ONE person has advocated a little bit of buying/spending
- >restraint in order to save to buy a house.
- > In the spirit of helping out that one true believer ; ), I would like
- >to offer a couple of tips that have served me well, for all my 30 years:
- >(with house, 2 cars, 2 cats, no bills.)
-
- > 1. Get those credit card bills down to $0.00
- > The corrolary to this: pay off your
- > cars, etc. Get all bills to $0.00.
- > Once you quit paying XX% interest,
- > you'll be amazed at how much you "save"
-
- Absolutely, NEVER carry a balance on your credit card, it is generally costing
- you upwards of 17%, which is not worth it. (unless you paid medical bills with
- the card, or something equally important, a new receiver and great speakers
- don't count)
-
- > 1.5 TRY to exist on a cash only basis from hereafter,
- > and use those credit cards only for purchases that
- > you can pay off in a month -- and only because you
- > want to make some interest on your cash accounts in
- > the meantime.
-
- I actually put everything I can on a credit card and then pay the full amount
- when the payment due date comes. A corollary would be to pick a bank which
- gives you the option of earning interest (however low a rate) on your balance.
-
- > 2. Save ANYTHING. But make sure you save at least
- > something every single week. If it's $20.00 bucks
- > this week, then make it $200.00 when you have finally
- > paid off your credit cards.
-
- Definitely. Also, do the saving immediately upon receipt of your paycheck, not
- after it's all been spent. (I have my paycheck automatically deposited and
- then draw checks and automatic withdrawals against the account)
-
- > 3. Do not buy anything on the spur of the moment. This means
- > that you go gorcery, clothes, sundry shopping with a list,
- > every time. No buying anything that wasn't on the list.
- >
- > 4. For everything that you managed to resist, put that money
- > into a jar. Empty that jar into a savings/money market/
- > investment fund at least once a month.
-
- In general, don't treat money saved on something as money that can be
- used for any whim of yours. ALL money is equal and should be saved.
-
- > 6. And, I hate to say it, but the other guy said it right:
- > live frugally for a year or two. Find free things to do,
- > go on cheap vacations to relatives places in the Pocanos,
- > or wherever, and make sure your families know that you
- > are in the frugal mode: you'll be amazed at the helpful ; )
- > suggestions and the extra generosity that may come your
- > way for Xmas, birthdays, etc.! This also gets you off
- > the on-upmanship game of gift giving...
- >
- > AND: entertain at home, with friends who you like and who
- > are the type to bring something (subsidizing everyone else's
- > Friday binge is not what we have in mind here.)
-
- This is the greatest thing. Instead of sitting with your friends in
- a smoky bar with music so loud that you can't hear each other, and with
- high priced drinks, do it at home and have a better time at it.
-
- >
- > 7. Life is not too short to live frugally for a year or two, in
- > order to accomplish large goals. And who said frugal had
- > to be boring???? Life is always what YOU make of it: money
- > is only a part of the equation, not the whole.
-
- You said it, money isn't nearly as important for having fun as we make it out
- to be. Some of the best things in life are free.
-
- Actually, I have done all the above things and saved enough to buy a house,
- (at least a goodly down payment for one) but have decided that it isn't
- worth buying a house now. (fate, I guess)
-
- Mark
-