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The Dollar Stretcher

The Dollar Stretcher blog will explore people and money.

How Bad Is It?

Have you ever felt like throwing in the towel? Just calling it quits? Decided that you can't control your future and that the sanest thing to do is to pull out the credit card and just not worry about what you put on it?

Recently, a friend sent me a link for an article on MSN Money. The article was called the "garage sale economy" and discussed all the hard times caused by the housing market and the "growing probability that 2008 will be a recession year."

It bugged me. In part, because writers have been predicting a recession since 2001. The facts show that the economy grew at a 4.9% rate in the third quarter http://money.cnn.com/2007/12/20/news/economy/economy_pace.ap/index.htm and the GDP (gross domestic product) has been growing at 2% or better since 2002. Add that to the 8.3 million new jobs since August, 2003 <http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/economy/> and the fact that real income (after inflation) is up 12% over the last 7 years. These are all very good trends. Looking at them, you'd have to ask if the real dark cloud isn't in the writer's imagination.

Please don't misunderstand me. I know that some people are hurting. And, that there are folks who are victims of circumstances that they didn't create. That's always the case (in good times and in bad). I'd like to try to make things easier for people who struggle. That's one of the reasons that we don't charge for our email newsletters or anything on the The Dollar Stretcher.com website. We want to help people who are struggling. And, we believe that it's always good to help those who need it.

Some people will lose their homes. That's terrible. I do some volunteer work with the homeless and it breaks my heart to see what happens. But even those who face losing their homes do have some (admittedly limited) options. Mortgage companies are realizing that foreclosure is not their best choice. Once they foreclose they own the home and are responsible for it until it's sold. And, once all the expenses are added in they could lose $100,000 on each house they foreclose. So working with the current homeowner to keep the payment affordable makes sense. Even if they have to add some current late mortgage payments to the end of the mortgage.  

What really concerns me is how many people read these articles on how bad the economy is and decide that there's no sense looking for a better job or getting training that would qualify them for a new, more promising career. How many people give up on themselves because of what they see on the nightly news? They've given up before even making an attempt to change their circumstances. To me, beliving that you're a victim of circumstances and have no control over your future is terribly sad.

I can't promise that 2008 won't be a challenge. But I do believe that just about all of us can do something to make our financial lives better this year. And, I promise that we'll do the best that we can to help provide the ideas and tools that you can use to do it. So are you willing to promise yourself that you won't succumb to negative perceptions (whether justified or not) and you'll give yourself every chance to succeed this year? Seems like the least that you can do for yourself.

Published Jan 08 2008, 09:02 AM by Gary
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Comments

 

Jusmom1 said:

Good article.  Motivated me to STAY motivated and avoid complacency.  I need to keep pushing forward with my frugal goals for 2008 even if the predictions are less than rosy.

January 12, 2008 6:45 AM
 

Cinnamonhuskies said:

The nightly news either depresses me or scares me.  Either way it is a motivator. I have a relative that has been through multiple union strikes and their philosophy is you might as well buy whatever you want now and enjoy it before it gets taken away! Then after the strike or layoff, they buy again. I don't understand that "eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow we die" mentality. What a hopeless way to live, rather be proactive with your life and finances.

January 14, 2008 11:24 AM
 

debbie z said:

I have been in the position where the maximum I could send toward debt each month covered the interest and left about 25 cents going toward paying the debt off.  My solution was to be radical for a few months so I could send enough to at least one debt to start seeing a drop in principal balance.

For me, taking control gave me a feeling of power, which made me get a firmer grip and increased my feeling of control and it was an upward spiral of self esteem and results.  I would not want to live that way again, since I was living little better than a street person, but for a short time I felt that I could grit my teeth and move through it.  I lived through it, and have made a very firm decision to avoid ever getting back in that trap.  As the saying goes, you may catch a cat in a trap once, but you won't catch the same cat in the same trap twice.

January 14, 2008 7:19 PM
 

Cheryl said:

What is this nightly news y'all are talking about?

I'm kidding, of course. But seriously, I can't remember the last time I watched it. When I hear from others that a certain thing has happened, I will hop on here and read a news site if I'm curious, and my homepage has the local weather.  Pretty much all I need.

I personally dont need to know about every crisis on our planet just because the technology is available that I can.  

January 16, 2008 10:59 AM
 

DriftingDudeSC said:

Bad news sells. A sad observation on the human condition.

January 25, 2008 5:26 AM
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