Cutting Personal Expenses Really Adds Up

17 February 2009
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Is your job in danger of being shipped overseas? Is your employer considering a hiring and salary freeze? Are you unemployed? These trying economic times may cause difficulties, but they also represent a tremendous opportunity for each of us to examine our role in the economy and to examine our personal consumption habits. If we all resolve to improve the quality of our spending, even though we may be limited in how much we spend, our world will come out of the current recession much healthier than it was before.

If money is tight, or even if it’s not, carefully consider every purchase you make. Here are some no-brainer suggestions for ways to cut your expenses. You may think these things are too trivial to bother with, but over the course of a year or two, the savings will really add up:

  • When you reach for the last book of checks in your drawer and see that “reorder now” sheet, instead of calling your bank, shop for bank checks online. Buying online can save you most of the markup that your bank charges.
  • Check your newspaper subscription rates. If it is cheaper to just get the Sunday paper, change your subscription. You can save a lot of time by reading the paper only one day per week. Be sure to clip grocery coupons from your Sunday paper. The savings will pay for the paper many times over and will significantly cut your food bill.
  • If the store is just down the street, walk or ride a bicycle to do your shopping. Use cloth tote bags or a backpack to carry your purchases home. If you avoid driving just one mile per day, you will save anywhere from $25 to $75 per year on gasoline, depending on your car’s efficiency and the price of gasoline.
  • Turn your thermostat down in the winter and up in the summer. Look for inexpensive ways to improve the energy efficiency of your house. Easy ways to save energy are by covering windows on cold nights and plugging leaks around windows and doors.
  • Buy unprocessed foods and cook from scratch. Not eating out can save you a ton of money. But, don’t be a hermit. Spend some money to support your local businesses, like taking your significant other out on his or her birthday!
  • Need new clothes? Kids often outgrow clothing before it wears out, so check your local thrift store for great deals on almost new clothing. You can find like new items at amazing prices.

These are just a few simple suggestions. Make saving money a pleasurable pastime. When you buy checks, don’t get the same plain boring style you have had for years. Get checks with frogs or something exciting like wolf checks instead. Try new recipes and eat things you’ve never tried before (how about a juicy grilled bison burger?). Buy a designer dress that you could never afford brand new for just a few dollars at your local thrift store. See Life as a grand adventure!



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