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8 votes
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Donald Trump's company sentenced to pay $1.61 million penalty for tax fraud
11 votes -
Safe deposit boxes aren’t safe
8 votes -
Scams, zealots, and jet skis: Life inside the crypto scene
3 votes -
What are your financial goals? What habits, practices, and strategies do you use to reach them?
How do you spend your money? How do you want to spend it? How do you save? I'm curious what strategies my fellow Tildenizens use to spend efficiently, build savings for retirement and other...
How do you spend your money? How do you want to spend it? How do you save?
I'm curious what strategies my fellow Tildenizens use to spend efficiently, build savings for retirement and other purchases, and otherwise maximize their financial lives. How do you use your money to maximize your happiness?
Here's me: I'm young, single, thankfully debt-free, and my annual salary is about $70,000. I'm able to save approximately 35% of that by living relatively frugally:
All My Stuff
- I live in a big city, but not an expensive one. I pay rent, but it's pretty low for the amenities I have access to.
- I live with a roommate to reduce expenses. We're on the same wavelength about minimizing spending.
- I don't own a car and rely on public transit and carpooling to get places. I also work from home.
- I go out of my way to shop at the cheapest grocery stores in the area to cut my weekly bill in half (or more).
- I have three credit cards, but I always keep my utilization low and never miss a minimum payment.
- I have a separate bank account (checking) for bills than for general spending. I set up my direct deposit to automatically put in all necessary funds for bills into the bill account. Then I set up autopay with all my providers so I don't miss payments. I have one month's buffer in this account in case there's some issue with my paycheck.
- I contribute as much as I can to my employer-provided 401(k) savings account every month and invest in index funds. I can get to about 65% of the IRS max contribution limit with my income.
- I contribute to a Roth Individual Retirement Account (IRA) every month to reach the IRS max contribution limit for the year, and invest in index funds.
- I have a high-deductible healthcare plan (HDHP) which lets me use a Health Savings Account (HSA). My company pays a little into my HSA each month, and I contribute a similar amount to reach the IRS max contribution limit. Instead of using the HSA to pay for medical expenses, my strategy is to pay out of pocket for all expenses and simply invest the funds in my HSA in index funds to maximize their growth potential. Since this account is so tax-advantaged, investments here are more efficient (as far as I can tell) than in any other account I know of.
- I have a taxable brokerage account that I contribute a small amount to each month. I know this isn't technically as efficient as putting more into my 401(k), but I figure I might want to use some of this money before I retire. I also kind of like betting on random stocks. Irresponsible, I know, but it's like $20 at a time. Gotta have fun?
- I set up my TreasuryDirect.gov account to automatically buy I-Bonds while inflation is high, but only on the order of $100/mo. I don't know when I should stop exactly... we'll see what the interest rates are in May?
I'm not really sure what I'm saving for here. I know you're not supposed to make financial decisions without a plan, but I honestly don't know what I want to do in the next 5 years, let alone 50. People tell me that I should buy a house to build equity instead of throwing away money in rent, but I'm enjoying not dealing with maintenance, and I don't know if I want to stay in this city for more than a few years. It's cute, and I have friends here, but city hall is full of goobers and there are too many highways nearby messing with the feng shui.
Someone also suggested that I buy a small property and rent it out through a property management company, even if I'm still renting myself. Besides landlords being the scum of the earth and the moral quandaries that might present if I were to become one (even a tolerable one), that also feels like a lot of work. Possibly also financially unrealistic considering I'd need a 20% down payment on a house I don't intend to live in, and... I don't have that.
I also might switch careers soon-ish, possibly to software engineering, which has a better earnings potential. I've avoided it in the past because I feel like I'm just not good enough at programming. I don't know how I would properly improve those skills now that I'm out of school.
My pipe dream is that I want to build a really fricking big building. That's my goal. I want it to be really sick and have big Gothic spires and gargoyles and stained glass windows and cool stone carvings everywhere (but also be ADA accessible and not full of asbestos, because it's 2023). And people would come from miles around and say, "Wow, that's a cool building." All the non-racist secret societies could meet in its various hidden chambers and do whatever they do. I would hire whoever builds concert halls to design the acoustics so I could have some bomb choirs going in there, and make the floor sprung so they could do those crazy ballet dances too. Maybe at the same time. Also there would be a moat full of lava. And a robot dragon to guard it all just in case. I think this would cost upward of $500 million in total. Unfortunately that's slightly out of budget, even at my abnormal savings rate.
But priorities change, right? I figure that if I can save enough to make myself think I might be able to build my big-ass building one day, when I eventually realize, "Wait a second, my kid needs to go to college," I'll accidentally have enough to make that happen.
How does this compare to your life? What tips, tricks, and ideas would you like to share to help each other out? What are your financial dreams? I'm really interested in chatting with everyone about this.
6 votes -
Barnes and Noble's surprising turnaround
18 votes -
Japan’s business owners can’t find successors. This man is giving his away.
9 votes -
Danish bank workers celebrate full year without robberies – finance workers' union says number of bank heists has been affected by fall in use of cash in recent years
8 votes -
Battle for the nation's soul – Norway faces debate about gas and oil wealth
8 votes -
Iceland Foods has lost its ongoing legal battle with the country Iceland over the frozen food retailer's trademark name after the EUIPO dismissed its appeal
7 votes -
Why the super rich are inevitable?
14 votes -
Sam Bankman-Fried: FTX founder arrested in Bahamas
11 votes -
Denmark's largest bank Danske Bank has been fined €470 million over an international money laundering scandal
4 votes -
Altruism and development - It's complicated
3 votes -
Where does all the cardboard come from?
2 votes -
At least $1 billion of client funds missing at failed crypto firm FTX, sources say
23 votes -
Banks devising ways to ID mass shooters before they strike
6 votes -
US grew 2.9% in third quarter, GDP shows, and there’s little sign of recession for now
8 votes -
3pool: The canary in the Tether coalmine
3 votes -
Inflation, part 2: Shelter in Canada and the United States
3 votes -
Mormonism and the rise and fall of mutual aid
3 votes -
A theme park crisis is wrecking South Korea’s bond market
3 votes -
Real inflation cycle theory
4 votes -
I fought the PayPal and I won
8 votes -
Norway-style windfall tax on energy companies could raise £33.3bn extra by 2027, plugging a hole in UK government finances, analysis has found
4 votes -
The crypto story: Where it came from, what it all means, and why it still matters
13 votes -
US GDP accelerated at 2.6% pace in Q3, better than expected as growth turns positive
8 votes -
The case of the disappearing ink—a US tax court mystery
4 votes -
Are billionaires a market failure? And if not market, are they social failure?
I was reading this text from the Washington Post (sorry for the maybe paywall): https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/06/xi-jinping-crackdown-china-economy-change/ The opinion asserts...
I was reading this text from the Washington Post (sorry for the maybe paywall):
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/06/xi-jinping-crackdown-china-economy-change/
The opinion asserts that in response to liberalization of Chinese life, driven by capitalistic economic growth, is the reason that Xi Pinjing "cracked down in every sphere imaginable — attacking the private sector, humiliating billionaires, reviving Communist ideology, purging the party of corrupt officials and ramping up nationalism (mostly anti-Western) in both word and deed."
My conspiratorial brain latched on to the humiliating billionaires line, and started thinking about a between the lines message along the lines that billionaires are good and should not be humiliated, a subtle warning-response to the progressive grumblings here in the U.S. that a failure to support capitalism will result in totalitarianism.
Then I started thinking about the questions, are billionaires good for society? I had always held the position that a billionaire is a market failure (in my econ 101 understanding of the term), much like pollution. It is improper hoarding and unfair leveraging of capital into disproportionate and un-earned degree of pesonal privilege.
It is certainly a by-product of euro-american capitalism, whereby the desires and welfare of the many are trodden on by those with the ability to fight and to shape the regulatory machine meant to protect the interests of the common-wealth.
I see a few possibilities. One, is that my understanding of economics is wrong, and producing as many billionaires as possible is the ultimate goal of capitalism and in fact good for everyone, even in theory.
Two, it is indeed as I suspect, a market failure. And the failure here is one of degree, it is not, in fact problematic to have some individuals with significantly greater wealth among us, and is, in fact, beneficial overall, but to have some with so much more than the rest of us (wealth inequaility) is a result of getting in the way of a clean functioning marketplace.
Three, economic theory is working as described, and economic theory/activity is an insufficient foundation for the maintenance and success of a whole society, and we need to find a way to constrain it to its own sphere, so that it provides us with what we need to be healthy and happy, but no more.
I turn to the bright minds of tildes: am I looking at this right?
16 votes -
Iceland offers the best pension provisions, followed by the Netherlands and Denmark, according to a survey by pensions consultants Mercer
5 votes -
Lukashenko imposes ban on price increases in Belarus effective immediately
7 votes -
Norway's digital currency experiment – what is it and how does it work?
6 votes -
UK scraps tax cut for wealthy that sparked market turmoil
11 votes -
Liz Truss's UK growth plan is nothing but a magic potion
11 votes -
UK in turmoil as government's gamble to solve economic woes fuels crisis, instead
9 votes -
openbb terminal is a open source investment research platform (stocks, index funds, crypto etc)
3 votes -
Grab – Asia's Uber – knows customers and drivers so well it can vet them for loans
6 votes -
What is SAP? (And why is it worth $163B USD)
6 votes -
Insurers force change on US police departments long resistant to it
8 votes -
Can software simplify the supply chain? Ryan Petersen thinks so
6 votes -
Podimo, the Denmark-based subscription service for podcasts and audiobooks, secures €58.6 million in funding
3 votes -
US child poverty rate at an all-time low
11 votes -
Siting bank branches
3 votes -
The Ethereum Merge is done, opening a new era for the second-biggest blockchain
23 votes -
A Chinese spy wanted GE’s secrets, but the US got China’s instead
11 votes -
4,000 US Google cafeteria workers quietly unionized during the pandemic
12 votes -
How this Florida town became the sea sponge capital of the world | Big Business
2 votes -
The branch banking model
8 votes -
Klarna has revealed that losses more than tripled in the first half of the year – firm has been hit by a slowdown in consumer spending
8 votes -
The Biden-Harris administration's US student debt relief plan
35 votes