Poor Denis Diderot couldn't help himself.
The 16th century philosopher was given a beautiful scarlet dressing gown as a gift — a casual robe to wear around the house. Unfortunately, the fancy dressing gown made everything else in his life look shabby. So Diderto replaced artwork, bookshelves and furniture to match the gift's level of luxury. It was as if the new dressing gown had taken over his life.
"I was absolute master of my old dressing gown," he said in an essay published in 1772, "but I have become a slave to my new one."
Dave Chilton, author of "The Wealthy Barber" and its recent sequel, " The Wealthy Barber Returns," thinks Diderot's story rings true.
"Spending begets spending," Chilton says. "I've seen that a thousand times in my career."
But spending does not beget wealth. Sixty percent of workers say the total value of their household savings and investments (not counting their home) is less than $25,000, according to a study by the Employee Benefit Research Institute.
The National Foundation for Credit Counseling found 64 percent of Americans couldn't rely on their savings account to pay for a $1,000 financial emergency.
People do not have enough in savings to weather the common emergencies that life throws them. A study by Doorways to Dreams of families with $20-60,000 in annual income found that 62 percent of households experienced at least one financial shock in the last year and 51 percent of households lacked any emergency savings to help them cope.
Experts say there are many reasons why Americans are failing to take the most basic steps of financial responsibility. But there are also ways that people and organizations have found to increase savings and, they say, to even make it fun.
Nobody wants to save
"Nobody out there really wants to save, truthfully," Chilton says. "Your kids want you to spend. The government wants you to spend. ... Even your inner self wants you to spend your money. It is not a fair field of competition. Everyone wants you to spend and overcoming all that pressure is quite difficult."
Jim Yih says there are different cultural reasons why people don't save.
Yih, a financial educator and author in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, says school is considered the main source of financial education, but there is just not enough of it.
Another problem, he says, is a consumption attitude.
"We are a spending society," he says. "We've taken every major holiday and turned it into a big sales event."
In times past people would delay gratification. And many stores would only accept cash. Now, Yih says, his kids won't believe him when he says he can't afford something. They just tell him to use a credit card.
Governmental blocks to saving
Daniel J. Mitchell, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a non-partisan libertarian think tank headquartered in Washington, D.C., says if people save or invest money instead of just spending it, they may be subject to more taxes. It is as if the government is saying, "Save and pay more taxes. Spend and pay less."
Andrew Schrage, co-owner of Money Crashers Personal Finance (MoneyCrashers.com), explains some of those taxation layers: income taxes, capital gains taxes if a purchased stock does well, taxes if the stock issues dividends and, after a person dies, inheritance taxes.
Mitchell says the middle class do not save as much as they did in the past because of government spending programs. They don't save for retirement because of Social Security. They don't need to save for health care, unemployment, education and so forth, he says. The incentives to save are not there.
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The first datum presented surprised me. Not even $1000 saved for a financial emergency?? And that's 64%? No wonder the media can sell fear about the "fiscal cliff."
Good report, Mr. De Groote. Get them to fix the main page More..
I didn't read the entire article but there are two things that come to mind regarding this subject:
1) Why do we have to declare intereast on savings as income on our tax returns? Uncle Sam is placing a damper on the practice of More..
No prudent person will put their money in savings in a climate of one-half percent on interest and "quantitative easing" which is debasing our currency by printing money to pay down the debt. We should be investing in foreign currencies More..