Why we lie about money and debt

Posted at 23:05 on Monday December 06, 2004 | Filed Under Miscellaneous , Saving
Seventy-five percent of respondents, for example, claim they don't make any major purchases on credit cards unless they can pay them off immediately. But 74 percent say they are concerned about being able to pay their credit card bills every month.

Read the rest of this excellent article from BankRate.com:

Why we lie about money and debt

Incidentally, sometimes it's not lying. One of my friends asked me to help her set up a budget a few days ago. When she came over, I took a look at her finances (she has a part-time job and earns $220.00/week) and asked her one question:

"How much do you spend per week?" "$30-$50," she told me.

This is a cool fact: Almost all of the people I've taught underestimate their spending by at least half.) I wrote "$50" down and we began analyzing what she spends weekly together. When we came up with the final number, her face was ashen with disbelief:

With a weekly income of $220.00, she was spending $205.00. In other words, she was spending over 93% of her income.
-$45 on drinks
-$40 on food
-$20 on magazines
-$20 on clothes
-The rest was miscellaneous spending

She wasn't lying--she just didn't know. Isn't it worth your time to spend an hour figuring out your budget?

Now what?
DONE READING?
Now you can leave your own comment or subscribe to the newsletter

Leave your comment

NOTE
Fields marked with asterisk (*) are required.
:
:
:
remember me:
(You may use HTML tags for style)

getting started

This is a blog on personal finance (banking, saving, budgeting, and investing) and personal entrepreneurship.

It's for students, recent graduates, and other young people.

about me

Ramit Sethi

I'm a recent graduate of Stanford, where I studied technology and psychology. Now I'm the co-founder & VP of Marketing for PBwiki, a wiki startup in Silicon Valley.

categories
stay tuned

Stay current with updates:
Sign up for the free newsletter...

...or use RSS / Atom feed:

RSS FeedAtom Feed