Search Smart Spending:

6 reasons why I love cash

Posted Aug 18 2008, 03:29 AM by Donna Freedman
Rating:

Last month my colleague Karen Datko linked to a post from personal finance blogger "Broke Grad Student." The short essay, "6 reasons why I hate cash," seemed at least partly tongue in cheek, especially since a couple of days later he followed up with reasons to love money. Yet the underlying sentiment -- plastic rules, cash stinks -- seemed genuine.

Broke Grad Student wrote his piece after making an ATM run to buy food at his workplace cafe. "Having to make the trip to get the cash (annoyed) me," he wrote. Good grief -- hasn't this man ever thought about getting cash back with a purchase from the supermarket or drugstore? Or, for that matter, about packing his own lunch?

The blogger further groused that cash is "easy to lose." Just about everybody misplaces moola, he claimed, and afterward "you can't call an 800 number and have them cancel your $20 bills."

Yeah, and if you lose your credit or debit card and don't have any cash on you, good luck with that cab ride.

We've got coins that go jingle, jangle, jingle
Maybe he was kidding. Maybe not. But here are my six reasons why cash is cool:

1. It reminds you how much you’re allowed to spend. On a cash-only system you know that once your walking-around money is gone, it's time to go home. Plastic makes it easy to announce, "Next round's on me, and let's get some food too!" You might not do that if you had to take actual money out of your wallet to pay.

2. Cash reminds you how much you earn. Suppose you get paid $10 an hour. (Hi there, all you stunned college graduates!) You want to buy a shirt on sale for $20. Hold a double sawbuck in your hand: It represents two hours of stocking auto parts/answering phones/selling bagels. Is it worth two hours of your life just to get another garment? Maybe, if it's a really cute shirt. Probably not, though.

3. "Change sucks," the PF blogger wrote. Sometimes it does. But coins can also be a painless way of saving if you throw all you have into a jar every night. Someday, you might be able to buy a truck with your stash. Most of us, though, will just be happy to bank some extra dollars -- that is, if we can find a bank that will accept the coins.

More reasons to love that lucre
4. Tossing all your dollar bills into a jar is a faster way to set aside some dough. It's helped some Smart Spending message board readers to save upward of $500 so far this year. A Boston-area woman who saves all $5 bills ended up with more than $12,000 in three years.

5. Paper money "folds, wrinkles and tears," Broke Grad Student griped, making it hard to fit into a vending machine. So why not use those horrible coins instead? (Or skip vending machines.)  Furthermore, a wrinkly bill is still legal tender whereas a cracked credit card or one with a damaged magnetic strip spells trouble. You can still use it for online shopping, but a restaurant or store is likely to want an intact card.

6. Finally, the blogger noted that cash is "hard to split" -- when everybody pulls out a twenty at dinner, it takes time to "figure out what combination of change we need to get so everybody gets enough money back." How'd he get to be a grad student without being able to do simple mathematics? The fact is, using cash for dinner out is a great way to stay on budget because, once again, it involves the actual concept of money spent: With tax and tip, I just spent two hours' worth of salary on a burger, fries and beer. If you use plastic, it's easy just to sign and forget.

You wanna play, you gotta pay
Look, I've got nothing against plastic. Instead of going to an ATM for my own walking-around money, I get cash back with debit card purchases. Frankly, ATMs make me nervous; I wonder if I'm going to get robbed.

The rest of the time, I use a credit card in order to get frequent flier miles. In fact, I just cashed a bunch in last month for a really frugal trip to see family and friends. Rewards and cash-back programs can be great if you play your cards right, so to speak. Broke Grad Student gets money back each year. He also pays his bills in full each month.

Not everyone has that kind of self-control, which is why I'm concerned when people eschew cash entirely. Swiping a credit or debit card can give the delightful feeling of just having obtained what we want without actually having paid for it.

That is, until the monthly statements arrive and we realize just how much we actually did pay. Plus interest. Ka-ching!

Comments

 

My husband and I use cash to pay for all of our weekly espenses.  We take out $375 for food, gas and all other non bill expenses like clothes and school supplies and any extras we might want.  once that cash is gone for the week...It's gone and that's it!  It's helped us stay on track with our IRA and for saving for a new car.  Sometimes if we have a lot left over we spends it on something fun, but other times we put it back in the bank.  Oh and we also save all of our change in a piggy bank.  Last time we rolled it up we had almost $265!

I used a credit card for most of my purchases for a long time, but then I found myself spending more and more.  I never did carry a credit card debt, but the mere prospect of having one scared the bejesus out of me, so I did what any sane (or is this nuts?) person would do:  I paid off my last bill and started going cash-only.  

Granted, a large part of the credit card bills were for the vet care of a stray kitten (now a glossy and sweet indoor-only cat), so I don't think my spending habits actually changed that much.  Nevertheless I got nervous whenever I received a bill in the triple digits (and here everybody who has a credit card debt of $1000 or more can laugh at me).  

Rewards programs are a good idea, but they are a little like playing with fire.  We use a straight 3% cash back on our purchases which works best for us.  It's easy to get caught up in points and miles, but in the end cash is the easiest to use.  We wrote about the playing with fire dichotemy on our blog

spillingbuckets.blogspot.com/.../playing-with-fire-free-50-bonus.html

We count our credit card cash back as passive income because we don't spend any more than necessary to get it, and no work, other than reaching for a particular card at the grocery store or gas station is required.

My wife and I have no credit cards knowing full well how much trouble you can get into

using them so when we set down and drew up a budget we decided at that point we needed to stick to it not only for our sake but our kids sake as well.

Using cash only is a great way to manage your money and save for your familys as well.

Both of our children are with in graduating age and Id really like to be ther to help them along with there future choices if needed but if your just charging everything to a credit card it only sets your future and theres futher behind

we are addicted to spending and credit which tends to stem from little displine of where the finish line is. Cash leaves no doubt.

Cash back is the consumer's best friend.  Ever since I found out I could get cash from my savings account simply by getting cash back after making grocery purchases that I have to do regularly anyway, I would never pay a fee to use an ATM!

A couple of months ago there was a study that showed that people do tend to spend more when using credit card as oppsed to cash.   That being said I use my debit card for most purchases and get cash back when I need it, but I also track my spending on a spreadsheet on my computer and do my banking weekly.  I also round up when I make a debit card purchase so that at the end of the month I usually have an extra $20-$25.  

We use a credit card extensively, but pay off the balance every time.  Since my wife is not employed out side the home, at present, we have cut back our spending, but to use cash for gas is too much trouble, unless one goes to full service and pays the extra twenty cents a gallon or more.  We use the Creditacard for groceries and incedentals, so getting cash back each time would be an expensive waste of money (cash advance on the CC).  With free ATMs in scarcity, we don't use one much.  I do have a Credit Union branch at my work location where I can get cash from a real teller.

The real value of using cash is that it curbs idetntity theft ie: no one hcak in to your retailer and steal your credit card or debit card account number.   Secondly, cash purchases aren't tracked and used for marketing.

I hate cash.  I'm a disciplined spender and actually enter my debit card amounts in my check book at the register, just as if I were paying a check.  Actually, some clerks start to say, "I'm sorry, we don't take checks" before noticing I have my card out.

I'm all for smart cards and a cashless society.  If I have $20 cash on me in the U.S., that's a lot.  The only time I carry lots of cash is when travelling internationally, in countries where cash is the only practical means of exchange.  I love the new pre-paid cards denominated in foreign currency, not the U.S. dollar.

(I also hate duplicate checks).

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):