Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Is Plastic Making You Happier?

If you’re like most people, you probably ain at least one.

And like most people, you’ve maybe never thought what it’s really costing you…

At a recent conference held by the Fabian Society at London’s Imperial college, one of the issues discussed was happiness, and, more than than specifically, why it looks to elude so many of us.

One of the decisions reached was that one of the top causes of sadness in the last 50 old age have got been people’s changeless desire to raise their degree of stuff wealthiness (especially in relation to others who have more).

As one talker noted, ‘We’re like children on a rainy Lord'S Day afternoon, impossible to please. We have got everything and nothing.’

You may disagree, but I can’t believe of a worse modern symbol of this changeless craving than the credit card.

Yes, I know, they might look a windfall when payday isn’t for another hebdomad and a half. Having ‘free’ money can be a antic thing...if you manage to pay it back on clip that is...

If you’re like a great many, though, and only managing to do that minimum monthly repayment, here are 4 things to believe about the adjacent clip you attain for that piece of plastic…

1 It’s very expensive!

2% interest a calendar month may sound like peanuts but that compares to 24% per year. Let’s imagine, like me, you lived in the UK, and had an average balance of £8000 on your card... that would intend you were paying £160 a calendar month interest. On the national average salary, that’s almost a week’s work!

2 It’s not your money

You’re actually paying person else for the privilege of making you poorer! That hard-earned cash should be in your pocket, not some lender’s. How can you stay solvent if you’re continually disbursement money you don’t have?

3 Money Burns a hole in your pocket

If you’re like me, I can wager you’ve met or cognize tons of people who always look to have got got too much calendar month left at the end of the money. Yet, I’ll stake you if they earned double or even soprano their income, they would still happen some manner to squander it. It looks to be in our nature somehow.

We’ve all seen those quiz shows where the contestants win large money. What’s the first inquiry they’re asked? Yep, that’s right, ‘How are you going to pass it?’ Iodine don’t recollection many replying they would wisely put it for their retirement.

4 You pass what you don’t have

Credit cards give you the semblance of being wealthy. Let’s human face it, if you were handing over a 1000 dollars instead of that small piece of plastic, you might just halt and have got a quick rethink.

It used to be the lawsuit that Gold cards (those 1s with the monolithic disbursement limits) were the continue of the wealthy, but the banks weren’t too long in realizing that if they gave these out to everyone, they would simply travel ahead and pass as if they were wealthy. We look to prefer semblance to reality, somehow.

Way back in the sixties, a French philosopher called Jean-Paul Sartre came up with a conception he called the Practico Inert.

Fancy terminology aside, he was trying to explicate in a nutshell how world almost always (and without realizing it) go captives of their ain creations.

He used the illustration of Chinese provincials who needed wood in order to supply combustible and edifice stuffs for themselves. The long-term effect, though, was that the continual loss of trees needed for wood gradually exposed their land to implosion therapy and drought.

Likewise, in our modern world, the credit card do a short-term illusion of freedom and control, but in reality, only makes you poorer and additions your dependence on others.

So adjacent clip you’re tempted to attain for that piece of plastic, halt for a second and have got a think about it’s true worth to you.

Is it really making you any happier, or like so many others, could it be seriously detrimental your wealth?

1 comment:

The Love to Lead Team said...

I agree with you that money obtained on credit is not going to make you happier, especially if you have to struggle to repay it! I suppose it’s best to stick to not spending what you don’t have.
Kate - www.lovetolead.info