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Tax rebate? Tax bonus? The semantics of spending

Posted Feb 08 2008, 11:05 AM by Donna Freedman
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If President Bush wants us to spend that tax rebate, he needs to call it a tax "bonus." Or so wrote behavioral scientist Nicholas Epley in a recent New York Times guest column.

"A rebate, psychologically speaking, is the return of a loss of one's own money ... so it is unlikely to be seen as extra spending money," wrote Epley, a professor at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business.

In one experiment at Harvard, he and some colleagues gave out $50 checks. Half the study participants were told it was a "rebate," while the other half got a "bonus." A week later, the bonus recipients had outspent the rebate crowd by more than 50 percent.

Can simple word choices really make that much difference? Sure they can. The word "budget" makes some people's jaws clench. Somehow the phrase "spending plan" sounds a lot better.

Force vs. choice
"Budget" sounds like deprivation, lack, bean-counting. It feels like something being taken away, namely the ability to spend one's own hard-earned dough.

A "spending plan," on the other hand, is a nice balance of action and autonomy. Here's some money. Plan carefully before spending. But do spend it.

"Budget" is a faceless authority figure hectoring you over every dollar. "Spending plan" is a direction in which those dollars could go -- or, as Smart Spending partner blogger J.D. Roth calls it, "a roadmap for your money." 

I like maps better than lectures. The former gives me a chance to direct my own route in life. The latter makes me feel like a naughty child who's about to get grounded, or at least lose dessert privileges.

Call it what you will
When the clock nudges 8 p.m. at a baby-sitting job, here's what I say to the child in my care: "Do you want to read a story before or after you put on your pajamas?"

The fact is, it's bedtime and that's that. But if he feels that he has some choice, however small, there's a lot less whining.

It's the same for us tall kids. There really is no difference between a budget and a spending plan. Yet if a semantical switch is what you need, then use whatever phrase you like. Call it a spending plan or a roadmap or even Bob the Budget, just as long as you take charge of your money.

Track your spending. Craft some financial goals. Implement them. Note your progress. If necessary, retool your goals or -- best-case scenario -- add more.

And as for the tax rebate/bonus? Call that whatever you like, too. Just be sure to factor it into Bob the Budget.

Comments

 

It's neither a rebate nor a bonus, it's merely an advance or a loan against next year's tax refund.  It will have to be repaid.  So, best advice, pay off debt or put it in the bank to send back to the IRS in 2009.

I wish we could individually accept or decline this "rebate".  I don't even want it in my posession if I am just going to have to give it back in 09.

WHAT IS IT THE SENIORS GET!  THEY SHOULD BE ENTITLED TO MORE, COST OF LIVING AND VERY LOW SSI INCOME?????

SO, THIS WILL BE TAKEN OFF OF NEXT YEARS TAX REFUND, OR WE HAVE TO CLAIM IT AS INCOME ON NEXT YEARS INCOME?

What happens if you owe back taxes? They aren't going to spend you a check they will just apply it to what you already owe. You can't apply the money for 2009. Then you will just owe more next year.

Why do yo say it's a loan?????

What it is, and should be called, is an advance of our own refund money; pay me now or pay me later.  It might end up to be more of a hardship for a lot of folks next year; yet we don't have a choice.

And yet another parting shot by our outgoing president.  When does a "rebate" become a LOAN?  Why do we allow the political influences in this country to manipulate the economy in the current year by issuing "rebates" to taxpayers, only to take the money back next year when we file our 2008 income tax returns?  All the talk about stimulating the economy through "rebating" tax dollars is simply more "smoke" levied at the middle class.  Does the phrase "weapons of mass destruction" sound familiar?  Again, we are being misled by the current administration of our fundamental rights to information regarding the welfare of our country. How many taxpayers understand the consequence of this "rebate" so generously given by the current administration?  Why doesn't the administration call this process what it really is...a LOAN...instead of a "rebate"?  NO GUTS....

what a crock of crap........who wants a check you have to repay?  Are they crazy or do they think we are stupid?  Stimulus package my butt.  The word rebate means retroactive refund of something paid.  This is NOT a rebate.

I'm not going to spend it because the IRS will want it back on April 15, 2009

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