FREE NEWSLETTER

Sunk cost is the investment you regret buying. Opportunity cost is the added expense you’ll incur if you don’t get over it.

Latest PostsAll Discussions »

Affordable is an interesting word – especially related to healthcare

"I think the issue is the avg salary in America is about $50,000, and the insurance deductible for a family with decent coverage is $12,000 a year (In Network)."
- Mike A
Read more »

The Monthly Payment Trap: How Car Dealerships Hide the Real Cost

"We paid cash for our current car too. Still got the big pitch to finance. I suspect the sales people are incentivized to get a financed sale. All the reason I don’t believe a word I hear at a car dealership!"
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

Becoming A “Bad Investor”

"I have had similar thoughts about concentration risk for most of this year. I ended up trimming some of my high-flyers and increasing stable-value investments in the form of money market and ultra-short term bond funds, all within IRAs to avoid tax consequences. I did look at international investments, which are having a very good year, but decided they did not offer enough trade-off between potentially reducing risk and sufficient long-term performance when compared with domestic U.S. investments."
- Humble Reader
Read more »

The Incredible Shrinking — Stock Market?

"Corporations have a life cycle. For most, at some time they will be publicly owned. When they lose relevance they are often taken back to private ownership. The dream of most entrepreneurs is to take their startup public and get the big bucks."
- stelea99
Read more »

Security risk with CoPilot+ PC

"Great recommendation for users who can manage the transition to Linux PC. I tried Knoppix live CD back in 2002, and several other distros over the years but none quite met my needs - until this week. I repurposed my 13-year-old Windows laptop with Linux Mint Cinnamon. I'm impressed by how much Linux has vastly matured in usability, even on old hardware."
- quan nguyen
Read more »

$92,000 a year is quite an investment. The ROI is real, but maybe not.

"Thanks for the statement: "However, I think they are all better off with the degrees they have, just not necessarily economically". While I favor emphasizing value over "prestige" when choosing a college, there are other important benefits from education besides a potential boost in lifetime earnings."
- Jack Hannam
Read more »

27 Months

"Was in Portugal recently - can't get over how inexpensive food was - and just about everything else"
- George Counihan
Read more »

Would You Raid the Piggy Bank or Mortgage the House?

"Your cash allocation is only part of your defensive arsenal. Beyond that contingency, you have your short-duration bond allocation that not only acts as a stability tool for the portfolio, but a source of low-volatility funds during a prolonged downturn. To my mind, most people who have “won the game” should seriously consider having a minimum of ten years' spending needs between those two asset classes."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Fifty-seven years and counting and it’s snowing…again.

"Dick and Connie, happy belated anniversary. We have been out of town, so I didn’t see this until today. Happy for you both and we hope to make 57 years also. Chris"
- baldscreen
Read more »

Calculating the Maximum Income While Staying in the 12% Tax Bracket

"Or if you're in the 12% income bracket and happen to push more qualified dividends or capital gains into the 15% bracket, it would be (12%+15%)*1.06=28.62%."
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Interest Rates Battle

EARLIER THIS WEEK, the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee met and decided to lower interest rates by a quarter-point. This immediately sparked a war of words. At a press conference, Fed chair Jerome Powell took a swipe at the White House, blaming the president’s new tariff policies for an uptick in inflation. President Trump wasted no time in responding. All year, he has been lobbying Fed officials to move rates lower. And while they have been taking steps in that direction, the pace has been incremental, frustrating the president. Powell is “a stiff,” Trump said on Wednesday. “Our rate should be much lower.” This is just the latest chapter in a long-running feud. Trump first appointed Powell to the Fed during his first term but grew frustrated with him after a short time. As far back as 2019, Trump was chiding Powell online, calling him a “bonehead” at one point.  In 2022, the Biden administration reappointed Powell for a second term, with the result that the Trump-Powell feud continues today. Why would the White House prefer to see rates lowered? In short, lower rates make life more affordable for everyone. They make mortgages cheaper, along with car loans and credit cards. Lower rates also make it less expensive for businesses to borrow. Thus, from a political perspective, lower rates are almost always popular.  The challenge for the president, though, is that he has only indirect control over the Federal Reserve. The Fed is technically an independent entity and not part of the executive branch, though the president does have the authority to appoint members to the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which makes rate-setting decisions. The president also appoints the chair of that committee. But as with all appointees, there’s never a guarantee which way committee members will go once they’ve been appointed. And their terms are staggered, meaning the president can’t easily make changes. Earlier this year, in fact, the president explored the idea of firing Powell but found that his hands were tied. That helps explain the ongoing war of words. In addition to making purchases cheaper for consumers, lower interest rates are also positive for the stock market. Why? According to finance theory, the value of a company should equal the sum of all of its future profits. But future profits have to be adjusted for the time value of money—the idea that a dollar next year is worth less than a dollar today. When interest rates are lower, future profits are discounted less. All things being equal, that translates to higher stock prices. That’s another reason the White House would like to see the Fed take quicker action. If lower rates carry so many benefits, why isn’t the Fed moving more quickly? That brings us to what’s known as the “dual mandate.” In its role setting rates, the Fed is responsible, on the one hand, for maintaining full employment. Lower rates help in that regard. At the same time, the other side of the Fed’s dual mandate requires it to manage inflation. Economists talk about the risk of the economy “overheating,” and that’s Powell’s key concern. Especially after seeing prices spike nearly 10% in the wake of the pandemic, the Fed wants to avoid a repeat of that unpleasant experience. Higher rates help keep inflation in check. The Fed’s job, in other words, is to strike a delicate balance between rates that are too high and too low. This ends up being a tricky task, and for that reason, presidents have often tangled with their counterparts at the Fed. In the 1830s, prior to the creation of the Federal Reserve, there was an entity known as the Second Bank of the United States. It was the closest thing to a central bank at the time. But President Andrew Jackson had bitter conflict with the leaders of the Second Bank. He ultimately revoked its charter and had it shut down. That’s why the United States lacked a central bank for decades, until the Fed was created. But almost as soon as the Fed was created in 1913, conflict with successive White Houses resumed.  In the 1950s, the Fed, under chair William McChesney Martin, was moving more slowly than President Truman had wanted, leading him to brand Fed officials “a bunch of cowards.”  Martin stood his ground though. In a speech that same year, he explained that the Fed’s role was akin to that of a chaperone who is obligated to “take away the punch bowl” before things got out of hand. Martin, in fact, is credited with coining that term. From Truman’s point of view, though, lower rates would have served a larger national purpose. In the wake of World War II, the government was saddled with a historically high level of debt. Truman’s hope was that if the Fed lowered borrowing costs, it would help the government work down its debt load more quickly. It was for that reason that Truman also excoriated Martin as a “traitor.” This tension very much mirrors the situation today. Since Covid, the federal government has been running dramatically higher deficits. This year, the federal government will bring in about $5 trillion but spend $7 trillion. Each year that deficits like this persist cause the government’s total debt load to grow. That, in turn, causes interest expenses to consume more and more of the budget. This year, interest will top $1 trillion, equal to one-seventh of all spending. Just as in Truman’s day, this is another reason today’s White House would like to see rates lower. Lyndon Johnson also butted heads with Fed chair Martin, at one point summoning him to his Texas ranch to press his case. Martin had wanted to keep rates higher because he feared that spending for Johnson’s Great Society would be inflationary. A frustrated Johnson reportedly shoved Martin against a wall and bellowed at him. Johnson also asked his attorney general if he could fire Martin but was advised that he couldn’t legitimately remove him. The debate about the Fed goes beyond the question of higher rates vs. lower rates. More fundamentally, the debate today is about the Fed’s overall role. In recent decades, the Fed has taken on the role of serving as lender of last resort during crises. In 2008, it helped stabilize banks by giving them cash in exchange for wobbly assets on their balance sheets. During Covid, the Fed dramatically expanded on its 2008 playbook. You may recall, for example, the stimulus checks and other payments the government issued. Those programs cost trillions. They were financed by the Federal Reserve, which has the unique ability to create dollars essentially out of thin air. The Fed has also stepped in to help various other crises over the years.  In light of this history, most people today see the Fed’s expanded role as a good thing. But not everyone agrees. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent recently published an opinion piece in which he criticized the Fed for taking its lender-of-last-resort playbook too far, flooding the economy with too much easy money for too many years. In Bessent’s view, this has contributed to widening wealth inequality. “The Fed must change course,” he wrote in September, and he is working to do what he can from the outside. Where does all this leave individual investors? Recently, I outlined ways an individual investor could build a portfolio of bonds to manage market risk. As this debate over the Fed reminds us, another reason to diversify is to protect against potential public policy changes that could affect the bond market. As investor and author Howard Marks often says, “we can’t predict, but we can prepare.”   Adam M. Grossman is the founder of Mayport, a fixed-fee wealth management firm. Sign up for Adam's Daily Ideas email, follow him on X @AdamMGrossman and check out his earlier articles.
Read more »

Overtime and Tips Deduction

THE IRS JUST provided some guidance on how the tips and overtime deductions will work. I wanted to spend a few minutes going over the details so that you can learn how it would be reported on your taxes and share this with friends and family. Overtime As a reminder, the OBBBA created Section 225, which allows you to deduct qualified overtime compensation. This deduction is capped at $12,500 per return ($25,000 for joint filers) and is subject to a phaseout based on modified adjusted gross income. The phaseout begins when MAGI exceeds $150,000 for single filers and $300,000 for joint filers. In order to qualify for the overtime deduction, it must, among other requirements, be paid to an individual who is both covered by and not exempt from the FLSA (also called an FLSA-eligible employee). Note that some FLSA-ineligible employees can be eligible for overtime under state law or paid premium rates for certain work (e.g. 2x rate on the weekends). However, the compensation paid to FLSA-ineligible employees is not qualified compensation for the purposes of this deduction. Here's the tricky part: employers aren't required to account for qualified overtime compensation in 2025. They aren't required to provide this information in Box 14 of Form W-2. They could, but they don't have to. They will for future years, though. This means that you must make a reasonable effort to determine: • Whether you are considered an FLSA-eligible employee (ask your HR/employer). If you aren't, you can't take the deduction. • Figure out the amount you can actually deduct if your employer doesn't populate Box 14 of Form W-2. Let's go over some examples:
  1. You log into your payroll portal and it shows $5,000 for the entire year as the "FLSA Overtime Premium" (don't confuse FLSA overtime premium with regular overtime; refer to example #2 for regular). You can use the entire $5,000 as the deduction.
  2. You log into your payroll portal and it shows "Total Overtime" for the year of $15,000, which is the FLSA overtime premium combined with your regular wages. You can then divide the amount by 3, and $5,000 will be your deduction. This is because the regular wages (the 1x amount) aren't part of the overtime deduction, and only the amount that exceeds your regular wage (the 0.5x amount) is counted for the purposes of overtime.
  3. You log into your payroll portal and it shows "Total Overtime" for the year of $20,000, but you get paid 2x the rate and not the standard 1.5x. In this case, you can divide the amount by 4, and your overtime amount is $5,000.
Overall, I'm sure a lot of people will make mistakes trying to figure out the overtime amounts... The big thing to understand is the the overtime compensation deduction is just the 0.5x portion of the 1.5x rate, not the full 1.5x rate (hence why you divide by 3 in example #2)    Tips Section 224 allows you to deduct qualified tips received during the taxable year and included on a statement furnished to you (a Form W-2) or reported using Form 4137. The deduction is capped at $25,000 per year and is subject to an income-based phaseout. The $25,000 deduction phases out for taxpayers with MAGI over $150,000 ($300,000 for joint filers). Modified adjusted gross income equals adjusted gross income (AGI) plus any amounts excluded under Sections 911, 931, or 933. For most people, MAGI equals AGI. Section 224(d)(1) defines "qualified tips" as tips received by an individual in an occupation that customarily and regularly received tips on or before December 31, 2024. Sorry, CPAs.. you can't get tipped $1,000 for that tax return you prepared. The Treasury provided a list of qualifying occupations (page 18 and onward). Tips are also only qualified if they are received voluntarily, without any consequence in the event of nonpayment. Here are some examples:
  1. You are a server. Form W-2, Box 7, shows $20,000 of Social Security tips. You also didn't report any additional cash tips on Form 4137. $20,000 can be used in determining the qualified tips for 2025.
  2. You are a server. Form W-2, Box 7, shows $15,000 of Social Security tips. You also reported $4,000 of unreported tips on Form 4137. The total qualified tips are $19,000.
  3. You are a self-employed travel guide who received $5,000 in tips from customers. You also received a Form 1099-K from an online booking platform showing $50,000 of payments. The Form 1099-K didn't separately show the tips, but you keep a daily tip log showing the amount, date, and customer. You can use $5,000 in determining the qualified tips for 2025. Just keep the receipts and logs in this case.
For both the overtime and tips deductions, make sure you have proof of how you've determined the amounts eligible for these deductions. Keep your W-2, payroll statements, forms, etc. They may come in handy if the IRS starts asking questions. For the 2026 tax year, filed in 2027, it should be much simpler, especially for the overtime deduction, as employers will be required to provide OBBBA amounts on Form W-2.   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

Affordable is an interesting word – especially related to healthcare

"I think the issue is the avg salary in America is about $50,000, and the insurance deductible for a family with decent coverage is $12,000 a year (In Network)."
- Mike A
Read more »

The Monthly Payment Trap: How Car Dealerships Hide the Real Cost

"We paid cash for our current car too. Still got the big pitch to finance. I suspect the sales people are incentivized to get a financed sale. All the reason I don’t believe a word I hear at a car dealership!"
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

Becoming A “Bad Investor”

"I have had similar thoughts about concentration risk for most of this year. I ended up trimming some of my high-flyers and increasing stable-value investments in the form of money market and ultra-short term bond funds, all within IRAs to avoid tax consequences. I did look at international investments, which are having a very good year, but decided they did not offer enough trade-off between potentially reducing risk and sufficient long-term performance when compared with domestic U.S. investments."
- Humble Reader
Read more »

The Incredible Shrinking — Stock Market?

"Corporations have a life cycle. For most, at some time they will be publicly owned. When they lose relevance they are often taken back to private ownership. The dream of most entrepreneurs is to take their startup public and get the big bucks."
- stelea99
Read more »

Security risk with CoPilot+ PC

"Great recommendation for users who can manage the transition to Linux PC. I tried Knoppix live CD back in 2002, and several other distros over the years but none quite met my needs - until this week. I repurposed my 13-year-old Windows laptop with Linux Mint Cinnamon. I'm impressed by how much Linux has vastly matured in usability, even on old hardware."
- quan nguyen
Read more »

$92,000 a year is quite an investment. The ROI is real, but maybe not.

"Thanks for the statement: "However, I think they are all better off with the degrees they have, just not necessarily economically". While I favor emphasizing value over "prestige" when choosing a college, there are other important benefits from education besides a potential boost in lifetime earnings."
- Jack Hannam
Read more »

27 Months

"Was in Portugal recently - can't get over how inexpensive food was - and just about everything else"
- George Counihan
Read more »

Would You Raid the Piggy Bank or Mortgage the House?

"Your cash allocation is only part of your defensive arsenal. Beyond that contingency, you have your short-duration bond allocation that not only acts as a stability tool for the portfolio, but a source of low-volatility funds during a prolonged downturn. To my mind, most people who have “won the game” should seriously consider having a minimum of ten years' spending needs between those two asset classes."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Fifty-seven years and counting and it’s snowing…again.

"Dick and Connie, happy belated anniversary. We have been out of town, so I didn’t see this until today. Happy for you both and we hope to make 57 years also. Chris"
- baldscreen
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 65: IF WE CAN easily afford to cover a financial loss out of pocket, we shouldn’t pay an insurance company to do so. An auto policy is a great idea—but one with low deductibles isn’t.

humans

NO. 67: WE WANT the freedom to spend our time as we wish. If we need to earn money to pay the bills, we’re compelled to relinquish control over part of our day and be at least partly answerable to others. Still, the alternative is expensive: To be financially independent, we might have to amass savings equal to perhaps 25 times our required portfolio income.

think

MORTALITY CREDITS. If you buy a lifetime income annuity at, say, age 65, you’ll receive annual income similar to spending down a bond portfolio over a quarter century—plus a bonus. That bonus reflects “mortality credits,” the fact that some annuity buyers die relatively young, effectively subsidizing those who continue collecting income until a ripe old age.

act

DUMP ROTTEN investments. We often keep bum investments for bad reasons: We inherited them, we hate to sell at a loss, we don’t want to admit our mistake, or selling feels disloyal because it’s our employer’s stock. Got a high-cost investment or one that hurts your portfolio’s diversification? Cut your losses—which could trim your tax bill—and start afresh.

Newsletter signup

Manifesto

NO. 65: IF WE CAN easily afford to cover a financial loss out of pocket, we shouldn’t pay an insurance company to do so. An auto policy is a great idea—but one with low deductibles isn’t.

Spotlight: Family

Let the Elephants Go

HAVE YOU HEARD THE parable of the white elephant? In southeast Asia, possessing a white elephant was symbolic of power and prestige. It was a good omen to find one in the wild, signifying peace and prosperity for the kingdom. They were considered sacred and could not be used in war or for labor. To receive a white elephant from the king was a great honor. Who would turn down such a special and unique gift?

Read more »

“Dad, how should I invest for retirement ?”

Ever have one of those moments?  You you’ve been reading HumbleDollar for a couple years and your 26 year old son calls and says “Dad, work is going to start kicking in %5 for a 403(b), what should I do?” “Well, son, let me tell you about low cost index funds…”
Anybody else had softballs teed up like this ?  🙂

Read more »

Making a Difference

OUR FOUR CHILDREN are adopted.
After we’d been married several years, we were dismayed that my wife hadn’t conceived. Through testing, we found that we were both essentially infertile. As one doctor put it, “It’s good you are married to each other.” We decided not to pursue surrogacy, in vitro fertilization or similar options.
I thought our life was on an even keel until one day my wife asked, “When you get to be 65,

Read more »

A Few Extra Bucks

MY FIRST JOB DURING high school was bagging groceries at Publix Super Markets. The starting wage was a cool $7 per hour in 2004. That was big money to me. It meant I could work the weekends and a few nights a week, and then buy music CDs on eBay. My 2005 goal was to earn enough to fund a Roth IRA at Vanguard Group.
Today’s teenagers have it better. Don’t take my word for it: The latest wage growth tracker,

Read more »

Cat’s in the Cradle

MY WIFE WAS STILL waking up from the general anesthesia. She’d had a Cesarean, or C-section. Meanwhile, I was in the nursery, helping the nurse record my newborn son’s vitals.
The Harry Chapin song Cat’s in the Cradle came over the loudspeaker. For readers unfamiliar with the song, it tells the story of a dad who is more interested in his job than his son. Having kids was never my priority. Making money was,

Read more »

Stepping Up

MY MOTHER WAS AN elementary school teacher, with a large break in her work history to raise three daughters. My father spent three years in the Navy before enjoying a successful career as a business executive in sales. Because of my father’s job, we moved a lot when I was growing up. My parents bought and sold eight homes during their working years.
They eventually settled in Connecticut and retired in their early 60s.

Read more »

Spotlight: Wasserman

Haste Makes Waste

IN SPAIN, “CHAPUZA” means something botched because of inattention or sloppy work. We learned the word when repairmen rewired the buzzers in our apartment building. They finished the work quickly so they’d be done in a single day. At 2 a.m. that night, we discovered the job was chapuza when our neighbor kept buzzing our apartment—because the buzzer had been mislabeled. Chapuza can be found everywhere. Back in the U.S., we hired a highly recommended electrician to do major work on our home. The two-day job went into a third hot day. Everyone wanted it done. Unfortunately, one of the younger guys in the crew rushed. We discovered afterwards that he’d dropped a tool out of the attic door that gashed our wall. That cost the company owner $100 to repair. Even worse, a week after the job was finished, I found two trucks and a bevy of people from our city power company clustered around our meter. The lead guy said it was running backwards and not charging us. I thought it was a joke and asked if the city was going to write me a check. It was no joke. Our electricians had gone chapuzas and, in the end, the city assessed us $782 to correct the meter. Of course, I passed this on to the electricians, who agreed to cover it. I’m sure that, combined with the $100 wall repair, it more than ate up their profit on the job. Chapuza can also be found in financial decisions.  A young man, whom we know extremely well, was lucky enough to get a good, high-paying job straight out of college as a software engineer. He had money to invest and decided to blindly go with an investment company that was recommended to him, rather than checking it out. He didn’t want to bother with all that research. Despite our warnings, he’s being charged unnecessary and exorbitant fees by this large institutional behemoth. Perhaps when he realizes the needlessly subtraction from his profit, and calculates the compound loss over time, he might be a little less chapuza about investing—and also realize Mom and Dad know a thing or two. As the Spanish say, “No seas chapuza.”
Read more »

Paths to Success

MY FRIEND HAFIZ HAS a common midlife problem. He’s built a successful career over 20 years. But now he wants a change—a new direction to focus his energy and talents. Over coffee, we kicked around the different paths he might take. Some were offshoots of his current job, such as becoming an industry consultant. Others were wholly new, like becoming a writer. “The problem,” Hafiz sighed, “is that whatever I do, it’s gotta pay for the country club.” Hafiz explained that, while his wife was the primary earner, his salary was dedicated to certain lifestyle luxuries, most notably the dues at their country club. Now, I’m not against someone enjoying country club life. We belonged to one ourselves for a while. What struck me, however, was Hafiz didn’t seem to be enjoying his membership so much as feeling trapped by it. It was an anchor limiting his movement along alternative paths to happiness. It reminded me of a Vox piece I recently read about what they call the near-rich. We often focus on the top 1% of Americans, with their yachts and jets. They control as much wealth as the bottom 90% of the population, according to the article. The near-rich, like my friend, are those in-between. While comprised of 9.9% of the population, often they’re the drivers of the social standards of American society. Through hard work and good education, many of them have successfully worked their way up to achieve an enviable lifestyle. Others have capitalized on the head start they were born with. They have played the game well, done it “right,” and now reap the rewards and symbols of success. According to the Vox article, however, there can be a problem lurking under this success. For the near-rich—and I include my own family in this group—the road to success is so well-worn that it can cut off the imagination. It limits our ability to consider other paths, or even other measures, of success. In my friend Hafiz’s case, he has certainly earned all the rewards from building a successful career. But now, these rewards—or a fear of losing them—hold him back. He can’t imagine a successful life without a country club membership. Fortunately, I see a change in attitude among millennials. As a retired teacher, I’m in contact with many of my former students. They’re still early in their careers, but seem less concerned with the traditional measures of accomplishment. They’re willing to work fewer hours and are less interested in rising up through the corporate ranks. In exchange, they have fewer possessions to worry about and more time for family and friends. They shun homeownership for the flexibility of renting. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] We oldsters may cluck our tongues and call them lazy for not striving for the things we think mark success. But perhaps they’ve seen the pitfalls of those traditional trophies, such as housing busts. They’ve become more creative and thoughtful in figuring out what they want. Some people even complain millennials are “killing" industries. But isn’t it their right to redefine consumerism on their own terms? The bottom line: Millennials are content. My wife and I both went directly from college to grad school and then on to a profession. We were taken aback when one of our sons, whose goal is to become an actuary, said he wanted to take two years after college to teach in Japan. Would it put him behind on the career path? What about the schedule of actuarial exams he had to take? What if he didn’t come back? He went, paying his own way. And, after two years, he returned. He’s just taken his fourth-level actuarial exam, and has a good job with State Farm. Even more, he has a world of extra cultural exposure. I realize now that, even if he had decided not to be an actuary, that would have been okay, too. Our other son had a high-paying software developer job in Madison, Wisconsin. He walked away to take a similar job with a smaller company in Austin, Texas. Austin is closer to his family and friends. Also, he’s a runner, and Austin has more tolerable running weather. When we are young, we’re told to imagine all the possible places we could go. We can’t let the success of one path, even a well-worn road, let us lose sight of the road less travelled. Jim Wasserman is a former business litigation attorney who taught economics and humanities for 20 years. He's the author of a three-book series on how to teach elementary, middle and high school students about behavioral economics and media literacy. He has authored several educational children's books. Jim’s newest book is Enough Stuff, a story about appreciating family and friends—rather than gifts—during the holidays. Jim lives in Texas with his wife and fellow HumbleDollar contributor, Jiab. Together, they're currently working on a book, “Your Third Life: Reflections on Finding Our Way by Taking the Long Route.” Check out Jim's earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

Scenes From a Life

ONE SUNDAY, MY SON was lamenting that he had a school project due the next day, but hadn’t yet taken any steps to get it done. When I asked what his plan was, he replied, “I could use a really good montage right about now.” For those who aren’t procrastinating teens with a father who delves into media literacy, a montage is a series of quick shots in a TV show or movie that accelerates time around a theme—that theme often being the effort and time expended to achieve a goal. Think of the athlete training for the big event, the artist trying to create, the business group trying to formulate a project, or even a building slowly going up. One sees the passage of time condensed on screen, perhaps with a brief stumble or glint of frustration along the way. But in the end, there’s the assured and ultimate victory. Such shows always detail the end result, but the long road to success seems summarized. Why is it truncated? You know why. It’s boring. It’s tedious. It’s often discouraging. Most of the time, those on the journey have no assurance of where the road will end. But that’s life. Think of the things you enjoy right now. A good relationship with a wonderful partner? It wasn’t built in a moment’s stare into each other’s eyes, but rather from working through issues, everything from easy ones about the kids to tough ones about the best way to load the dishwasher. Most people who visit sites like HumbleDollar are already attentive to financial issues. But what are the messages that movies and TV shows give to the average money handler? Wealth is often suddenly and fortuitously thrust upon someone. Saving is shown in a quick montage, starting with a few cents in the piggy bank and then—poof—the couple have the money they need. Spending for today is shown as rewarding and yet later there’s almost never a financial reckoning. To be sure, no single depiction will cause a viewer to become a spendthrift. But just as stalagmites are slowly formed by constant dripping, so too are our attitudes about money. There are many factors at play, but movies and TV shows aren’t helping. As a media literacy geek, I could demand that entertainment be more financially realistic. But—speaking of being realistic—people want to see the fun parts of life. It’s why few documentaries are blockbusters. How can we nudge ourselves along the long, uneven path of saving and delayed gratification? Perhaps we should treat our financial life like a movie, especially when we’re at that fork in the road where there’s a choice to spend or save: We hear a Rocky-like theme song as we delay spending’s immediate pleasure and instead struggle to keep the money in our wallets. Alternatively, we could have a general theme song to our life that reinforces the notion that everything is part of a long-term plan. My choice is Green Onions. We could imagine an audience is watching us as we make that spend or save decision. In fact, there may really be an audience—consisting of our children, whose money habits will be influenced by what they see. We have a cutaway “stumble” scene in our montage where we spend too much. Then we shake our heads, pick ourselves up and get back on the savings path. It’s also important to leave room for a sequel. We achieve our short-term savings goal, so we climb the stairs and raise our arms in victory. There will, however, be other, greater challenges ahead. We might even be laid low and have to struggle to reclaim our earlier victory. But we will prevail. Jim Wasserman is a former business litigation attorney who taught economics and humanities for 20 years. His previous articles include Changeup Pitch, Bored Games and Shame on Us. Jim’s three-book series on teaching behavioral economics and media literacy,  Media, Marketing, and Me, is being published in 2019. Jim lives in Granada, Spain, with his wife and fellow HumbleDollar contributor, Jiab. Together, they write a blog on retirement, finance and living abroad at YourThirdLife.com. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

Sinking Feeling

HOW MUCH WOULD you pay for $10? Taking my cues from a game developed by economist Martin Shubik, I’d offer to auction off a $10 bill to my high school students. There were three rules: Students could only offer bids. No commentary, cooperation or deal-making were allowed. The highest bidder paid me the money and received the $10. The second-highest bidder had to pay me their final bid but got nothing. I ran such auctions for 20 years and it almost always had three stages. Phase 1: Many students dabbled with bids in increments of five or 50 cents, slowly inching the price up. Phase 2: The dabblers dropped out and only the “serious” players remained, usually getting the price up to $5 or $6. Phase 3: The trap springs. Misha bids $6. Ben counters with $7. Misha, realizing she’s looking at paying $6 while getting nothing back, is forced to outbid Ben and goes to $8. Ben decides to finish it by bidding $9.99. Misha does some quick math and decides to bid $10 to break even, rather than pay $8. But wait, there’s more. Ben surprises the other students by bidding $10.01, rationally deciding it’s better to lose a penny than $9.99. Misha now faces the same dilemma, and so it goes on. At some point, I call the auction off and, despite my teacher salary, tell them no one has to pay me. I ask Misha and Ben to describe how they felt, which almost always includes feelings of regret and being trapped. They were no longer bidding to win, but to minimize their loss. This exercise is a great way to introduce students to the sunk cost fallacy. What’s that? It’s the spending trap that—once you start down a path by putting money into a venture—you feel compelled to see it all the way through, lest you’ve wasted the initial outlay. It’s “throwing good money after bad.” Funnily enough, the British have an opposite expression, “In for a penny, in for a pound,” which means you show determination by sticking it out, no matter what. That can achieve great things, but it can also be a lot of wasted pennies—which could have gone toward buying an ale to celebrate losing only one penny. The sunk cost trap is everywhere because we’re taught that successful people never give up, winners don’t quit, and the best solution is to never regret and never retreat, but instead always move forward. Unfortunately, this can also lead to prolonged failure, such as when decision-makers—who have invested financial, political and personal capital in a course of action—refuse to acknowledge that the time has come to cut bait and find another fishing pond (or try golf instead). A classic example: the Vietnam War. Back in 2019, a seeming lifetime ago, my wife Jiab and I went to the beautiful seaside Spanish village of Almuñecar. Located on the Costa Tropical of Spain, it’s one of those movie-like places with white-washed houses with Moorish accents and long sandy beach buffeted by the azure-blue Mediterranean. We loved the place for ourselves, but also learned it was just starting to be discovered by tourists coming to Spain for vacation, especially from Scandinavia. We immediately decided to look into buying a place that we could use occasionally for our own getaways, but mainly to generate holiday rental income to supplement our retirement. We found a place close to the beach and, by early 2020, we had settled on a price and put down a deposit. In Spain, there’s a quaint custom that real estate deals aren’t finalized until all parties meet with a notary, who reads the document aloud and signs off. This is left over from centuries ago when people were illiterate, so the notary ensured all parties understood what they were signing. Today, it’s a pro forma (and expensive) ritual that seals the deal. Only we didn’t get to it. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] COVID-19 hit and, as many remember, Spain went into total lockdown. All meetings were put off, so we sat in our home in Granada and waited to finalize the deal. And waited. Of course, our first priority was to do our part to stop the spread of COVID, so we stuck it out at home. As the situation remained in stasis, and the news everyday foretold a “new normal” coming, Jiab and I started reconsidering the house purchase. For ourselves, there was no foreseeable time when we’d be allowed to go to the new place. Even more, no one was sure when—or even if—tourism would come back, so the prospect of the new place being a positive money-generator evaporated. There were even stories that groups were seeking out unoccupied homes and taking them over as squatters, often trashing the place. On the other hand, we had already sunk a lot of money, time and effort into researching Spanish real estate, finding the place and negotiating a price. We had paid a lawyer both to translate for us and guide us through the process. We had a deposit that was partly nonrefundable. We ended up letting the place go. We cancelled the deal from our Granada home, informing the seller that he could keep the nonrefundable portion of the deposit. We wired payment to our lawyer and then reluctantly accepted that we were out of pocket, with nothing to show for it. Except we had escaped. We didn’t have to worry about squatters living in our rental property, or closely monitoring an inaccessible home, or fighting with others for the scraps of tourist dollars that were trickling in. We also realized how lucky we were, as we fretted about losing a second home, while many today are in fear of losing their primary one. I suspect others are facing similar tough decisions, as COVID changes the entire financial lay of the land. It isn’t a bad idea to think about what ventures, investments and dreams we might be better off walking away from, or at least putting off for the moment, no matter how much we’ve already put in. Perhaps we should save what we still have, so we can spend it another day. After all, $10 isn’t what it used to be. Jim Wasserman is a former business litigation attorney who taught economics and humanities for 20 years. His previous articles include Choice Words, A Poisoned Chalice and Falling for Flattery. Jim is the author of Media, Marketing, and Me, about teaching behavioral economics and media literacy, as well as Summa, a children's story for multiracial, multi-ethnic and multicultural families. Jim lives in Spain with his wife and fellow HumbleDollar contributor, Jiab. Together, they write a blog on retirement, finance and living abroad at YourThirdLife.com. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

YouTube, You Save

GOT SOMETHING THAT needs repairing? Faced with the increasing specialization of people’s knowledge, ever-growing technical complexity and our perennial lack of time, it’s often tempting to just call in an expert or even buy a replacement. But repairs can be costly, which is why we’re told to get multiple bids. One of the “bid” options I always check out: fixing it myself with the guidance of that repository of collective step-by-step knowhow, YouTube. Perhaps not since the Great Library of Alexandria has so much expertise been collected in one spot—along, of course, with endless cat videos and slick dance moves. Battery for the car key fob gone dead? YouTube plus $5 for the battery beats $20 at the dealer. Repairing a gate latch becomes a choice between installing an $18 latch delivered by Amazon or paying $100 for a guy to come out. Same thing with a leaky showerhead. I recently called about a garage door repair. The repairman said he charged $80 just to come out, which would be over and above the cost to repair. Perhaps best of all, there’s that feeling of accomplishment from having both mastered a new skill and saved some cash. As a retiree, I love the small challenges involved. My peers sometimes shrug about broken things and say they never learned to do repairs. But is it ever too late to start learning? A fence repair became a family activity with my sons. My daughter-in-law to be—a baker—changed the oil on her car, courtesy of YouTube tutelage. She was so excited she offered to do ours. Strikes me as a good thing: You learn skills, exercise the mind—and save money. Or, as Ben Franklin supposedly said, “Watch the pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.” But it seems he got that off the internet.
Read more »

Me Fighting Me

PSYCHOLOGISTS and biologists call it a supernormal stimulus response. Basically, organisms evolve in the direction of what’s good for them. There doesn’t seem to be an off switch to this instinct, however, so organisms can pursue these “good things” even to their detriment. For instance, field researchers have shown that birds instinctually drawn to colorful eggs will roost on more colorful fake eggs—and ignore their own. And, no, humans aren’t immune to such mistakes. Sunlight is good for us, but many know the pain of sunning to the point of sunburn. Advertisers know we have basic urges for sugar, salt and sex. They use these urges to nudge us to consume, say, sugary foods and salty snacks. Instinct can push us to crave more abstract things, too, that are higher on Maslow's hierarchy of needs. Financially, we can be nudged to go further than a healthy budget would allow. Our rush for a secure home can cause us to overspend. Biology and aesthetics say we desire a fit, attractive partner. But many cried “too far” at Peloton's sexist Christmas advertisement a couple of years ago. There’s also that strong desire to be viewed as “successful.” How that looks is ever-changing, but in a material world it almost always comes down to money and goods. We go into debt to be alpha peacocks, taking out huge mortgages so we can show the world an ever-bigger nest. On the road to success, we’re all accelerator and no brake. Even those who don’t crash aren’t “winners” because there is no finish line to this race, just the next urge to spend. If we don’t seem to have a natural off switch to our instinctual desires for more, can we create artificial ones? Even if we can't train ourselves to stop throwing good money after bad, could we at least stop ourselves from throwing away too much good money? Some people can simply say “enough stuff,” which just happens to be the name of a book I wrote, and walk away. On their daily calendar, many make notes to “do” or “don’t do” some things. Others need more tangible visual reminders—such as a sign in front of their computer that asks if the time, fees and frustration of all their portfolio manipulation is really worth the possible extra return. One friend has a small yin-yang symbol tattooed on his wrist to remind him to pause before acting. It’s a long story, but two weeks ago was a really bad time for our family. My stimulus response in such circumstances is to jump into action. I was doing everything—and nothing—all at once to try to fix the situation. This usually works, but this time it was like spinning the wheels of a car trapped in mud. My escape strategy was just digging a bigger hole, especially mentally. As luck would have it, I had to immediately travel to Thailand for in-law matters. Separated by time differences—and an unreliable internet connection—I was forced to quell my instinct to do things and just, well, ruminate. I thought, I mourned, I reflected. I was less active in trying to make things better, and that was a better resolution for me.
Read more »