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Frugality is the hot new trend

Posted Apr 28 2008, 10:50 PM by Karen Datko
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Has saving money replaced America's devotion to shop till you drop? Silicon Valley Blogger at The Digerati Life has found lots of evidence that frugality is catching on across the nation.

A chart of what's in and what's out -- posted at SFGate, the Web site of the San Francisco Chronicle -- says it best. Under "in" are such things as cooking at home and fixing the old car, as well as "library" and "tap water." The corresponding items under "out" are eating out, new car, bookstore and bottled water.

With the economy in or headed toward a recession, more people are less inclined to spend every dime they make and then some. "The International Monetary Fund predicts that household consumption will fall further in the next couple of years and that a 'prolonged period of belt-tightening' has just begun," "SVB" writes.

Or, as SFGate quoted David Rosenberg, chief North American economist for Merrill Lynch, "We're going back to the good old days of living within our means."

How do you jump on this bandwagon? A New York Times story cited by SVB shares the cost-cutting techniques of numerous people: Using ground turkey in place of ground beef, flying in the afternoon rather than early morning. One woman refills the A1 steak sauce bottle with a cheaper brand to fool her husband. The story also noted this change: "Sales of inexpensive domestic beers, like Keystone Light, are up; sales of higher-price imports, like Corona Extra, are down."

SVB lists a number of her own suggestions, including: traveling less, watching movies at home instead of in the theater, avoiding junk food, and increasing household income.

Comments

 

I almost never look through mail-order catalogs any more.  That way I'm not tempted to spend, and less likely to decide I "need" something that I actually don't.

budgetmama.com has a lot of free money saving tips, plus how to teach your kids about money.  If we all had learned about saving money early in life, maybe our nation would be better off.  

How about teaching kids to eat the food in the lunch bag not dispose of it in the waste basket. Has anyone looked lately at the waste of food in restaurants, salad bars, buffets in particular? This is the most wastfull nation when it comes to food. Why is every body crying when we see overweight people all over and food being wasted left and right? Junk food is expensive and of little nutrtional value. Collard greens someone? Very healthy and inexpensive.

How about teaching kids to eat the food in the lunch bag not dispose of it in the waste basket. Has anyone looked lately at the waste of food in restaurants, salad bars, buffets in particular? This is the most wastfull nation when it comes to food. Why is every body crying when we see overweight people all over and food being wasted left and right? Junk food is expensive and of little nutrtional value. Collard greens someone? Very healthy and inexpensive.

unless you're going to eat leftovers right away don't just cover them and put them back in the fridge. Put them in good storage containers. They will keep longer.

Buy in bulk and put servings in reusable freezer containers. If you use frezer bags, put he food in a cheapie bag, then put the package in a "real" freezer bag. That way the "real" freezer bag can be used over and over.

Sometimes leftovers can be combined to make a "goulash". I have eaten for day's adding leftover to macaroni or hamburger helper. Just use your imagination. You might have to convince your family to try it, but Hey, what the heck.

Some saving tips not mentioned: eat at Vietnamin restaurants, they're cheaper, use healthier fresh ingredients, and when have you seen fat Vietnamin people? Have goals in mind for your spending, if you keep all splurg spending to a dead halt you just maybe looking at your dream vacation, new kitchen, new car sooner and really have the means to buy it.  Whatever happened to dreaming about things.  Sometimes it's good to not get instantly everything, but to work for it, and yes, wait for it.  Eat when you are hungry, not when you think you should. Say "no" to drinking anything at a restaurant or bar (the mark up is high).  Buy your rotisary chicken at 8pm after they mark it down by half. Buy markdown produce if you have a receipe that you can use them.  There is Angel Food Ministries that buys in bulk and you can save loads on groceries with them.  Think outside the box and you will save loads!

Re: Only if we could get our local, state and federal governments  to think frugal

I feel the same way as you Jim, it's a joke what they spend.  

I am so happy to see & hear that people are starting to tighten up it's way over due, but better late then never too.

I myself grew up poor and I learned from a very young age how to stretch a dollar, you'd be amazed at what I can get.  I wish I could help the government learn how to get more for their money.  

I truly hope more people jump on this band wagon of saving and stop wasting.  I am sure they'll realize you really can get a lot more then you think when you just put your mind to it and work at it a little bit.

Thanks for the article.

Save Money With Laura Dot Com

Truly frugal people get a kick out of not having to spend money.  Seeing the balance in the account or investment portfolio increase, finding real bargains, paying down debt are all triumphs.  A frugal person  really wants to use things she already has and avoid shopping altogether.    I think that for a lot of people it's just the opposite:   the big joy comes from shopping and spending money.  Can those people ever really be frugal?  Habits die hard.  It may be more than just a habit for a lot of folks.   The desire for ostentation is a big one.

Donna, thanks for the mention.  Goes to show that when times get tough, frugality is the cool way to be.  

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