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Is it human nature to live beyond our means?

People have spent more than they had for centuries!

On a daily basis CCCS deals with all sorts of people across the salary spectrum and from many different backgrounds and professions. After all, a high-powered executive can get into the same situation as a supermarket shelf stacker if they’ve lived beyond their means and failed to budget correctly.

It’s not just the squeezed middle and the working class that are being hit; even people earning £100,000 plus per year are struggling.

This was brought home by chatting with my next door neighbour. He’s a down-to-earth type character who expresses no surprise at the current personal debt crisis. He says that as far back as he can remember people have always struggled for money just before the next payday.

He believes that the problem is that while in the distant past people accepted the struggle and tried to budget better, in more recent times when there was “too much month for some people’s money” we got another credit card, loan or overdraft. We refused to accept that we had no money available.

Debt slaves

All we hear from the news these days are the words ‘debt crisis’, be it in relation to governments, countries, currencies or households. But debt has been around since the beginning of the civilised world.

In ancient Greece people became 'debt slaves' after they lived beyond their means. Today’s personal debt crises are essentially old news. People have always spent more than they earned or suffered a life shock such as redundancy or job loss that they hadn’t made provision for.

Despite their incomes, many households have struggled before payday, or have no savings to fall back on in case of emergency. Over the years how many people have made no provision for the future and have simply lived from month to month?

But in the past few decades credit has become easily available and morally acceptable – it’s no longer seen as debt slavery. As a result of that, budgeting is more likely to go out of the window, both for the high-powered executive and the shelf stacker.

It’s not what your earn it’s what you spend

Using credit for daily living costs is one of the first signs that your budget isn’t working, unless you’re committed to paying it in full every month. You often only realise this when it’s too late. Your first reaction when one credit card is maxed out is to go and get another (rather than facing up to it), until eventually your money is no longer your own.

The high-powered executive and shelf stacker both need to learn the same lessons. It’s not what you earn (although it’s human nature that we all want to earn more), it’s usually how you spend it that causes the underlying issues.

On top of learning that spending less than we earn will keep us in good stead (as Micawber famously stated) we all need to learn that in order to put a financial firewall around ourselves we also need adequate savings to protect us from life’s bumps in the road.

2012 money resolutions

Going into what will be an economically tough 2012, it’s worth considering a New Year resolution to watch your expenditure and sure up your savings (read our 2011 money resolutions for ideas for pledges), especially if you find that as your payday approaches you’re using credit to survive. You can start by making a budget.

If you have been using credit to live and you feel like you’ve overcommitted yourself you might want to use our free online debt help tool CCCS Debt Remedy. It offers free, confidential and impartial advice.

We’ll focus on releasing you from debt slavery whether you’re a high-powered executive or a shelf-stacker.

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  • 03 December 2011

    @ oldhenry I've never in my life been in debt except for a mortgage which I paid off as soon as I could. Not before the 17% interest rates though :( I think the Government will keep interest rates down for as long as they can, and that will be years. Infuriating if you have no debt and have saved all your life, isn't it? Like oldhenry, I'm heavily into index-linked saving certificates - shares are great right now, but I simply can't understand why, so I'm staying with my old faithfuls. Next time the bottom falls out of the market I'll climb back in, but time's running out - I'm 63.

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  • 01 December 2011

    Generally speaking many people always have spent up their income. With access to easy credit , after credit cards came along, they spent beyond their income. I was brought up to live within my income and have always done so. Infact in the last 7 or 8 years before retirement I lived on half my salary and saved the rest so that I would have some savings behind me. I do have a pretty reasonable pension of about half my salary but you still have to live within it. I loathed my mortage and paid it off years before the due date by using windfall income form the 'privatisation' of building societies that I has joined. ( remember the 'carpet baggers'?, yes that was me). Now inflation is the most haunting prospect ,but I do have loads of index linked saving certs as I never did trust a government not to run to the inflation option to sort its mess out. If people ar etempted to have designer clthes, then go to TK Maxx. You canget your Calvin Klein underpants at far less than the going price, but what is the point? None at my age that is for sure!

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  • 01 December 2011

    If you want all the designer clothes, the 40 inch TV, the smart phone, the most expensive computer and the late model car; expect to be in debt unless you are Bob Diamond of Barclay's. I read this morning how many millions of pounds he has invested just this year in his bank; he is losing money on it so far; but should come out of it smiling. I don't have all the luxuries but I don't think I really need them. I talk to students in China using my laptop and use it for music and video too. I also use it for social networking, writing and editing photographs. My TV was cheap from Tesco and 19 inch; I'm not blind just yet. I'm thrifty and frugal and so can afford to save and invest; it was quite a good day fo me on the stock market yesterday. A year of being thrifty and frugal and ignoring fashions and trends can mean decades of being debt free and getting extra cash from savings and investments. Banks encourage people to borrow at silly interest rates on credit cards so the likes of Bob Diamond can have obscene salaries, share options and eye watering pension schemes. People spend silly amounts of money so they can have a Calvin Klein label on their underpants! Maybe, like the business students that I help in China, kids here need to learn about price loading of 'high end' products and the effects of compound interest. They did in Victorian times and we are supposed to go forward not back.

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