We’re borderline poverty level. Sometimes my bank account will only have $5 in it until the next payday. Some weeks supper consists of either ramen noodles or cheerios. We do try very hard to let the kids go places and do things that their friends are doing, so they probably don’t notice it as much as they would if we would be saving more. I have to depend on the bank of mom sometimes, but I always pay her back because I feel guilty.
I have $6000 in the bank right now. Just sitting there, being my emergency money. The amount has gone up and down over the last decade or so, I think I was under 2K at one point, but I’ve built it back up again.
I’m poor, I’m on a low income, but I also grew up poor and have been on a low income pretty much ever since. I’m an excellent budgeter. I’m naturally frugal. I know how to get by on a low income because I’ve spent my whole life doing it. When things are normal, I save, so that I can buy my way out from under a black swan if one should fall on me.
So, at the moment I have 6K in the bank, enough so that I’ve decided I can afford to spend a grand on nice things. 5K is still plenty, and any problem that swallowed up 5K would swallow another grand too if it was there to lose.
Want to know my secret? If you can’t afford it, do without.
I agree that 64% does seem high. Surely some proportion of that number are doing dumb things like leasing a new car, or spending money on other vices/non-essentials but beyond that, hard to really know.
I do think that with cars, specifically, a lot of people think of a car payment as like an electrical bill: it’s an inevitable part of life and just part of your fiscal reality. And I think this is often generational in nature: people trade up to a new car as soon as they pay their car off because that’s what’s always been done. The slightly more frugal version of this is paying off his car, replacing her car, paying off her car, replacing his car. It’s like I consider myself debt-free, even though I do have a mortgage, because some sort of housing cost is just part of life (and because I have a meaningful asset to offset it–the house). I think a lot of people think of car debt in that category, not as consumer debt.
I could put it on a credit card without batting an eye. But if you wanted actual physical cash, it would depend on where we are in the month. If you caught me at the right time, sure, but most of the time I would need 48 hours to transfer it out of ING Direct.
No. I got my land back out of the bank in June, so I’ve got no debts. I got a loan to put the roof on my house - so I’m better off than I’ve ever been - no rent, no loan and … my workplace closed down at the same time as I cleared everything so … no money. :smack: I’ve got around USD$100 in the bank right now.
Before all this having no money meant having a buffer of at least $1000 in savings.
Yes, but only because of recent refinancing of our home equity loan. If you’d asked a month ago, it’d be No. Fingers crossed we can leave this money in savings, but now my car needs brakes and my daughter’s breaking up with her BF and will need help finding a place.
Thanks, dangermom. The Other Shoe and I are still digging our way out of the debt we incurred when we both were independently laid off, and frankly, we’ll be in debt for years to come because of the job losses. So the OP’s attitude really got my hackles up.
I have less than $2 in my checking account until next week.
I’m on disability, I receive $850 a month from the government, $77 less than April 2009.
(yes, I know, I’m a burden on society, I get that, thank you)
Yes, I could, though it would clear out my personal bank account; I’ve been a student the past 4 years and don’t have much money that is “mine”. My husband could without any problems from his accounts (and consequently, the joint account, but I think of it as his money at the moment…yes, I know our financial arrangement is weird but it works for us).
I can (twice, even), but it’d have to be one hell of an emergency to warrant it. it would be two thirds our cash liquidity average. I’d be more likely to throw some of it at a credit card.
As it is, I think people really overstate what constitutes an emergency. Example: Our A/C died last year. We had the repair guy out two weeks ago to get an estimate. It’s been sweltering, but the $1500 estimate was more than we cared to part with. By my statement above, we have the money, but getting out somewhere with A/C during the hottest part of the day has been much easier than dealing with the $1500 ding to out bottom line. (Not to mention, it’s $200 a month we’re not spending in additional electricity.)
We have substantially less money than we’ve had in the past, but we’re still doing pretty good…I sure do miss those times where there was $20k between all our accounts.