Posts tagged early retirement
Wealth, 5 Year Olds, and The Bank of Wal-Mart
Jul 30th
Happy Friday sexy budgeters! It’s going to be a lovely Summer weekend again
Do your best to soak it all in, and then come back to check out these super awesome blogs! Lots of great stuff around the ‘nets this week, I hope you enjoy them as much as I did:
New Blog on my radar: Early Retirement Extreme - The title says it all
I’ve messaged Jacob here and there over the past cple months, but it wasn’t until the other day when I really dove into his site to see what it was about. And WOW. If you thought you were the king of frugal minimalism (just made that up), think again – that guy’s a pimp! Find out how he’s learned to live off a few hundred a month here, and then check out this other great post of his: Frugality is not deprivation.
Favorite reads this week:
- Is it better to be Rich or Wealthy? @ Dinks Finance
- Coming Soon: The Bank of Wal-Mart @ Go Banking Rates
- Money lessons I taught my 5 year old @ Bible Money Matters
- It’s called personal finance for a reason @ Sustainable Life Blog
- How we paid off our 2nd mortgage in less than three years @ No Debt Plan
- “I Don’t need to get a job. I don’t need the money!” @ Stop Buying Crap
Carnivals I participated in:
- Carnival of Personal Finance #267 @ Beating Broke
- Carnival of Money Stories #64: No Debt Plan ed @ No Debt Plan
- Festival of Fruglity #240: Magazine ed @ Wealth Informatics
Possibly related posts:
- Would I be rich if I earned $150k a year? I think so
- Bank Of Mom And Dad: New TV Show!!!
- Hell yeah I check my bank accounts every day! Why not?
Surprising Secrets of the Cheapskates Next Door
Jul 28th
This is a guest post from Jeff Yeager, author of the newly-published The Cheapskate Next Door. Yeager calls himself the Ultimate Cheapskate — and his wife agrees. Yeager is also a contributor at Wise Bread and on the Early Retirement forums.
“Sure, we could afford to spend more, but why would we? It wouldn’t make us any happier.” — Those are the words I’ve spent the last two-and-a-half years traveling the country to hear. It’s a simple but rare statement, given that nearly half of all Americans say that they literally live paycheck-to-paycheck and have little if any savings.
How can some people live not only within their means, but substantially below their means — even when their incomes are often less than the national average? And here’s the biggest question of all: How can some of those same people insist that they’re happier — joyous, really — because of their thrift and frugality?
I traveled thousands of miles — nearly 3,000 of them by bicycle! — and surveyed more than 300 of my beloved “Miser Advisers” to find the answers. In my new book, The Cheapskate Next Door, I share what I discovered about people and families — many of them just like you — who not only know how to stretch their money, but who are more content and happier because of it. The book also includes hundreds of their practical, money saving tips — ideas that anyone can use every day.
Some of what I found may not surprise you. These frugal folks:
- Despise debt and have found creative ways to eliminate it from their lives.
- Differentiate between “needs” and “wants,” and between “affordability” and “borrow-ability”.
- And, yes, most own and still wear at least one article of clothing dating back to the Carter administration (or earlier).
But other findings surprised even me, The Ultimate Cheapskate.
For example, only about 10% of the thrifty people I talked to have a written household budget (“we live our budget — it’s second nature — we don’t waste time writing about it,” one cheapskate said). While they have savings in the bank, less than 15% have a formal “emergency fund” (“an emergency fund is for people who don’t have their financial house in order otherwise,” another cheapskate said). And more than nine out of ten say that they think, worry, and stress-out about money less — not more — than their non-cheapskate peers.
The Cheapskates Next Door are 100+ times more likely to have a dog or cat adopted from a shelter than one purchased from a pet store, are far more likely to own a crock-pot (or several) than an IPod or flat-screen TV, and they divorce at less than half the national average.
These aren’t your miserable, Scrooge-like cheapskates. These are folks who know what’s important in life, and they skip the rest. Here’s a glimpse inside the mind of the Cheapskates Next Door:
- Cheapskates say, “The Joneses can kiss our assets.” Cheapskates are highly self-confident and proud of their frugal lifestyles, caring very little about what others think of them and even less about things like buying designer brand names and keeping up appearances with the Joneses.
- Cheapskates are immune from buyer’s remorse. Most shoppers eventually regret nearly 80% of the discretionary items they buy; but cheapskates are “premeditated shoppers” and, because of it, are largely immune from buyer’s remorse. Nearly 90% of the cheapskates surveyed say they “never” or “rarely” regret a purchase. And they don’t shop for “recreation” or “therapy,” which is one reason they prefer shopping at thrift stores (with a more certain selection of merchandise) than wasting time shopping at yard sales.
- Cheapskates appreciate appreciation (and depreciation, too). Other than when buying a house, most people usually don’t think about whether something will increase or decrease in value after they buy it. Cheapskates are tuned into appreciation/depreciation, often preferring to buy antique furniture (like the Amish do) that will retain/increase in value, and buying everything from cars to computers to clothing used, rather than new, so that the first owner pays for most of the depreciation.
- Cheapskates know that the best Things in life aren’t things. Social science has shown that Stuff tends to disappoint us over time, but experiences — how we spend our time — is what adds true value and meaning to life. Cheapskates value their time, and the things they can do with it, more than money, and the things they can buy with it.
- Cheapskates answer to a higher authority. For most of the cheapskates polled, it’s truly not about the money. Nine out of ten cheapskates say that their decision to live a more frugal life isn’t about trying to amass a big savings account; rather it’s primarily grounded in some higher ideals, such as religious beliefs or environmentalism. That’s why, of the cheapskates polled, they donate nearly twice as much to charity as the average American.
While most of the cheapskates I surveyed are lifelong devotees — having practiced frugality since long before the recent recession made it more fashionable — I kept asking myself while I was writing the book whether or not thrift is truly here to stay, particularly for the nouveau cheap. Will conspicuous consumption spring back to life faster than you can say “bailout” or “liar loan?”
I’m not at all confident about the answer. But the very last question in my survey was a hypothetical: Someone drops a million bucks on you tomorrow, how would it change your life? More than 9 out of 10 cheapskates, in so many words, said that it wouldn’t change their lifestyles in the slightest.
“Honestly,” one couple told me, “it would just serve to reinforce what we have already learned — that we have Enough right where we are, and we realize that is a gift most people don’t ever choose to receive.”
J.D.’s note: Though I haven’t had a chance to read The Cheapskate Next Door, I liked Yeager’s earlier book, The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to True Riches [my review].
Also: By a happy coincidence, Mr. Jeff Yeager, the Ultimate Cheapskate, passed through the Portland area on his cross-country bicycle book tour yesterday. He and I spent a couple of hours cycling through the Oregon countryside while chatting about frugality and other related subjects. Here’s a poor-quality photo of us crossing the Willamette River by ferry:

Dig my gigantic helmet and my awesome reflective vest. We sure look like a couple of dorks!
—
Related Articles at Get Rich Slowly:
- Forever Stamps
- Ask the Readers: How Do You Get a Job When Nobody Will Give You a Chance?
- Salary Secrets and Myths
- Reader Story: The Secret Millionaire and the Mathmobile
- links for 2007-03-11
Overdrafts, Sperm Donation, and Vampires
Jul 19th
Happy Friday sexy budgeters!!! (you are budgeting, right?) Welcome to the weekly roundup
I’m feeling a bit link-crazy today but I just can’t help it – there’s just so much GREAT stuff out there lately! Plus, I missed last week’s and there’s some great *new* sites I’m finding out about (although possibly new to only me) which I’ll be featuring going forward. Hopefully some of these inspire you!
New sites of the week:
Exile Lifestyle – Minimalism, adventure, LIFE, positivity – pretty much everything I’m personally working on myself. This dude’s a pimp, and I’m totally in awe. First blogger in a while to get me to actually stop what I’m doing and really *think*. Here’s are two posts I really enjoyed: Tell me what you are, not what you aren’t, and flocks of bloggers.
Stuff No One Told Me – If you like laughing and pictures, you’ll like this
Non-financial related.
Other great reads from the week:
- Perfection doesn’t exist @ Money Relationship
- The millionaire’s retirement plan is backwards @ Sweating The Big Stuff
- How many times did you overdraft last year? @ The One in Pink
- Kids are alright, but Sperm Donation is not deductible @ CBS Money Watch
- Car vs. Public Transportation: Which is more cost effective? @ Clever Dude
- Make money by giving away clothes for free? @ My Next Buck – (Brian’s alive!)
Non-financial but awesome
- This is why I’ll never be an adult @ Hyberbole and a Half
- The downsizing challenge @ Early Retirement Extreme
- Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter @ L.A. Times (Book! haha…)
- Help! Please send more hours @ Shopaholly (One of my favorite posts of hers)
Carnivals I’ve participated in lately:
- Carnival of Personal Finance #265 @ Funny About Money
- Carnival of Money Stories – Signs of Summer Edition @ Suburban Dollar
- Best of Money Carnival – “What I Love About America” Edition @ Wealth Pilgrim
- Carnival of Personal Finance 264th Edition @ My Journey to Millions
- Festival of Frugality #237 @ Funny About Money
————
(Photo cropped from the awesome Juliana Coutinho)
Possibly related posts:
Retirement Age – How Long Until You Can Retire?
Jul 15th
As far as 401k and IRAs are concerned retirement age is fifty nine years and six months of age, but what does that really mean for you? Read more about how to make early retirement a reality.
Kentucky Retirees May Soon Outnumber Pension Contributors
Jul 13th
In attempting to reduce current payouts, Kentucky granted excess benefits to workers who would go on early retirement. The result was less than stellar.
Please consider Retirees may soon outnumber workers contributing to state pension system
Just four years ago, there were 51,027 state workers contributing toward the pension fund and 34,120 retirees drawing benefits from it. By 2009, the number of workers slipped to 50,394 while the number of retirees leapt 19 percent to 40,531.(In a separate fund for Kentucky State Police workers, there already are 239 more retirees getting pensions than active troopers on duty. County governments, served by a third fund, had 93,481 workers and 45,564 retirees.)
At the same time, benefits got a little richer for workers who left under the “incentive windows” the legislature created in recent years to encourage retirement and reduce the payroll. One such incentive let workers base their pensions on their best three years of salaries rather than their best five years.
These incentives cause headaches at the Kentucky Retirement Systems because they send droves of workers for the exit years earlier than expected, Burnside said. That produces more people taking money from the funds, fewer people giving money and less money to invest for gains, he said.
Most state employees hired before 2008 can retire after 27 years and collect a pension based on an average of their best-paid years of service. For instance, a worker who earned $50,000 a year would draw an annual pension of $27,000 for the rest of her life, plus cost of living increases. Workers who perform “hazardous duty,” such as police officers, can retire after 20 years.
In the private sector, only about one in five workers still have a “defined-benefits” pension that guarantees payments for life, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The Kentucky Chamber of Commerce has used its Frankfort lobbying clout in recent years to call for a less generous public retirement package, in part because the costs help to starve other priorities, such as education.
“Clearly the state has tremendous financial problems now and we need to find ways to address this situation,” said Dave Adkisson, chamber president.
Adkisson challenges the notion that government employees deserve better retirement benefits as compensation for salaries that are smaller than the private sector’s. Based on the most recent data, Adkisson said, the average Kentucky state employee gets $40,900 a year, compared to $34,950 a year for the average private employee in Kentucky.
Once again, the first thing to do is stop digging deeper holes.
Defined benefit pension plans need to be stopped immediately for new hires. Second, as many public union jobs a possible (in theory all of them) should be privatized.
Finally, existing benefit promises need to be look at from every angle to see what can be done. Cities and counties can go bankrupt, but states can’t.
The ultimate solution for states is simple: default.
Public Pension Plans are like Rotting Whales
Every day, union supporters send me emails whining about these kind of posts. One person proposed I was “ignoring whales” while focusing on minnows.
Here is the deal, public unions along with corrupt politicians have bankrupted nearly every state in the union. This is one of the biggest issues facing the US, if not the biggest issue.
Yes, we bailed out the banks, but no one railed against that more than I did. The battle was lost. The new battle is for fiscal sanity. It makes no sense to fight battles that are over. We cannot undo the bank bailouts. We can do something about public unions and public union greed.
Public unions and untenable pension problems are the whales in the living room. It is high time we do something about it because the whales are rotting and the stench is unbearable.
Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.
Kentucky Retirees My Soon Outnumber Pension Contributors
Jul 13th
In attempting to reduce current payouts, Kentucky granted excess benefits to workers who would go on early retirement. The result was less than stellar.
Please consider Retirees may soon outnumber workers contributing to state pension system
Just four years ago, there were 51,027 state workers contributing toward the pension fund and 34,120 retirees drawing benefits from it. By 2009, the number of workers slipped to 50,394 while the number of retirees leapt 19 percent to 40,531.(In a separate fund for Kentucky State Police workers, there already are 239 more retirees getting pensions than active troopers on duty. County governments, served by a third fund, had 93,481 workers and 45,564 retirees.)
At the same time, benefits got a little richer for workers who left under the “incentive windows” the legislature created in recent years to encourage retirement and reduce the payroll. One such incentive let workers base their pensions on their best three years of salaries rather than their best five years.
These incentives cause headaches at the Kentucky Retirement Systems because they send droves of workers for the exit years earlier than expected, Burnside said. That produces more people taking money from the funds, fewer people giving money and less money to invest for gains, he said.
Most state employees hired before 2008 can retire after 27 years and collect a pension based on an average of their best-paid years of service. For instance, a worker who earned $50,000 a year would draw an annual pension of $27,000 for the rest of her life, plus cost of living increases. Workers who perform “hazardous duty,” such as police officers, can retire after 20 years.
In the private sector, only about one in five workers still have a “defined-benefits” pension that guarantees payments for life, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The Kentucky Chamber of Commerce has used its Frankfort lobbying clout in recent years to call for a less generous public retirement package, in part because the costs help to starve other priorities, such as education.
“Clearly the state has tremendous financial problems now and we need to find ways to address this situation,” said Dave Adkisson, chamber president.
Adkisson challenges the notion that government employees deserve better retirement benefits as compensation for salaries that are smaller than the private sector’s. Based on the most recent data, Adkisson said, the average Kentucky state employee gets $40,900 a year, compared to $34,950 a year for the average private employee in Kentucky.
Once again, the first thing to do is stop digging deeper holes.
Defined benefit pension plans need to be stopped immediately for new hires. Second, as many public union jobs a possible (in theory all of them) should be privatized.
Finally, existing benefit promises need to be look at from every angle to see what can be done. Cities and counties can go bankrupt, but states can’t.
The ultimate solution for states is simple: default.
Public Pension Plans are like Rotting Whales
Every day, union supporters send me emails whining about these kind of posts. One person proposed I was “ignoring whales” while focusing on minnows.
Here is the deal, public unions along with corrupt politicians have bankrupted nearly every state in the union. This is one of the biggest issues facing the US, if not the biggest issue.
Yes, we bailed out the banks, but no one railed against that more than I did. The battle was lost. The new battle is for fiscal sanity. It makes no sense to fight battles that are over. We cannot undo the bank bailouts. We can do something about public unions and public union greed.
Public unions and untenable pension problems are the whales in the living room. It is high time we do something about it because the whales are rotting and the stench is unbearable.
Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.
Retire Early: Slow And Steady With A Side Business
Jul 2nd
One of the best ways to hedge your bets financially, and to put away enough money to seriously consider early retirement, has always been owning a business on the side. But if your nest egg is cracked and leaking – or, worse, if you're having trouble even making ends meet – where do you come up with the resources to start or buy a business?



