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Get a stimulus check every year

Posted Jul 22 2008, 10:25 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog Blueprint for Financial Prosperity.

With presidential hopeful Barack Obama mentioning a potential second economic-stimulus check, many folks are clamoring to know more. Unfortunately, there's not much else to say about it other than that he'd push for one in the short term.

I, however, offer a different solution. In order to find an additional $600, you need only cut $50 in spending a month. In reality, that comes out to only $11.54 a week. Reduce your spending by $11.54 a week and you will have created your own stimulus check. That's it.

Can you do it? I'm betting that you can, and here are some recommendations for what you might want to trim.

Subscriptions. Make a list of all the subscriptions you have and take a long hard look at what you really use. Do you have a $50-a-month (or more) gym membership that you don't use? Do you have a $15-a-month Netflix membership but have had the same DVDs for the last three months? Do you get a copy of Good Housekeeping every month, yet you never do anything with it except leave it on the coffee table? Trim it.

Consider:

    • Gym memberships.

    • Video-rental memberships.

    • Magazines.

    • Cable television.

    • Internet.

    There are plenty more.

    Food and fuel. These are among the largest expenses for most families, so it makes sense that we turn to these two categories to find further savings, after trimming those that we can live without. (What doesn't make sense is why they're not included in the core Consumer Price Index. Oh, wait. I remember. It's so the number seems better.)

    First, let's tackle food. 

    Every Thursday there's a farmers market within walking distance of my home where fresh produce is sold at very low prices. I can get yellow squash for $1 a pound, versus $1.49 a pound at the local Giant Food supermarket. That's a 33% discount and, while we don't eat a ton of yellow squash, savings are savings.

    Another recommendation I've heard -- and one I am trying to follow -- is to eat more vegetables and less meat. Vegetables are healthier for you and far cheaper. Chicken breasts, at their very cheapest, are $1.69 a pound, and usually $2.99. Beef? Forget it. You're talking the north side of $4 a pound and sometimes much higher, depending on the cut, grade and whatever sale is going on.

    Lastly, be sure to review the circulars. You can see what's on sale for the week ahead and plan your menu accordingly. We know that the front page of the Giant Food supermarket circular has the sales, and we structure our meals based on what's on sale. This week we had some shish kebobs, and we'll prepare some "crumby chicken" (chicken breasts coated with crumbled Ritz crackers) tonight. Chicken is on sale. (Oh, and a leftover calendar helps reduce spoilage. It's still going strong with nothing going bad yet.)

    Now, on to fuel.

    I'm a huge proponent of car pooling, as it has the potential for the greatest savings. A second best option is to employ some techniques of realistic hypermiling. Don't tailgate trucks, but consider easing off the gas if you see a red light, and not slamming it when it turns green.

    Everyone can tell you to carpool or hypermile. How about something no one else has said before? Go to Google Maps or MSN Maps and plot out your daily commute. Investigate  alternative routes to see if they reduce your total mileage. While some factors are not illustrated on the maps (rush-hour zones, traffic lights, etc.), it will give you an accurate count of the miles traveled. You will have to decide for yourself whether the tradeoffs are worth it.

    I plotted my former commute on Google Maps and was able to reduce the trip from 16.1 miles to 15.5 miles. The shorter commute had three more traffic lights and used smaller roads, but missed a stretch of two highways that are usually clogged during rush hour. The shorter distance may seem inconsequential, but it's actually worth $40 a year. With $4-a-gallon gas and a car getting 30 miles per gallon, shaving off 0.6 of a mile is worth 8 cents. If I make the trip twice a day for 250 days, the typical work year, I save $40 by cutting out the 0.6. 

    So, plot your trip and any frequent trips you make (grocery store, doctor, dentist, etc.) to see if you can squeeze any efficiencies out of it.

    There you go -- some darn good suggestions on how to get an extra stimulus check each year.

    Other articles of interest at Blueprint for Financial Prosperity:

    Four ways you're unknowingly cheating on taxes

    HSBC Direct review

    Predicting Federal Reserve rate changes

    Comments

     

    With $4-a-gallon gas and a car getting 30 miles per gallon, each mile costs 8 cents.

    My math 400/30 =13.333 not 8

    Nothing like letting the world know who you want to be President. (read your first line in article).  WOW!  Obama talking about giving stimulus checks?   I thought the democrats bashed the Bush administration for doing that.   AHHH how the MEDIA portrays their Presidential hopeful.  Sounds like Henry Luce is back in business only this time he's a democrat.

    Slow traffic and stop lights use more gas, not less. A slightly longer drive with a constant speed saves gas. Planning your trip by distance according to online maps is not very practical. DRIVE the routes and take the ones that take less starting and stopping, have less traffic, and take less time. The longer your car is running, and the more stops you make, the more gas you use.

    I am glad that finally some people start to think the same way I am thinking  for the last 30 yesrs. if you know how to save (manage) your money, You can be better off in life, than people earning more money than you. And if you don't know how to save,you will be always broke, no matter how much money coming your way.

    Slow traffic and stop lights use more gas, not less. A slightly longer drive with a constant speed saves gas. Planning your trip by distance according to online maps is not very practical. DRIVE the routes and take the ones that take less starting and stopping, have less traffic, and take less time. The longer your car is running, and the more stops you make, the more gas you use.

    "chicken *** coated with crumbled Ritz crackers"

    Hmmm... Is he eating chicken butt? Or is he eating their upper chest and your filters are just a wee bit touchy? :)

    In Switzerland it is illegal to leave your engine running while stopped at a red light.  How much fuel (and money) is wasted in this country by leaving engines running at drive thrus,  stop lights, traffic jams, etc.?  Perhaps Americans should adopt better conservation habits.  Think of all the money that could be saved!

    Nickel, that filter is very sensitive. I've changed it to "breasts" and all is well. Thanks for pointing that out.

    I love your suggestions.  The leftover calendar is great.  Spoilage takes a big percentage of our food dollars.  Also, if your family doesn't ear leftovers, give them to someone who does and they can use them for lunch or a new dish for dinner.  Perhaps your can trade and have new meals for your family.  If you calculate the cost of making meals at home with the cost of the same meals at restaurants, with the same amount of meat, you can prepare them much cheaper. Chicken alfredo has little chicken actually in it at the rest.  Good way to stretch your budget.  Many other favorite restaurant meals are the same.  Every little bit adds up!

    One really good way to save money is by never bringing it into the household budget.  When I was raising my family,  when my husband got a raise he had it witheld as savings.  I was used to feeding them on a certain amount and just adjusted the menu's to make it work.  We only had one car, so I would plan the entire weeks menu's and then check the Refrigerator and pantry to see what was needed to prepare them.  From that came the "grocery list"  which I did not stray from.  Those impulsive purchases, which I have grown used to now that we are no longer on such a limited budget, were avoided by only buying what was on the list.  It saved money wasted on buying something tht you already had in the refrigerator, and it saved money on gas.  Our income was less than many of our neighbors, but we ived better and always had money in the bank for emergencies and for investing when the occasion was right.  If you don't spend more money than you make, and you always put a little aside--paying ourself we used to call it--you will have a much easier life.  

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