Food for Thought: Half of Americans Didn’t Eat Out Last Year

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

Despite recent findings that the number one thing Americans waste their money on is eating out, a new survey provides the proverbial “food for thought” to those who believe they are struggling alone in their own personal financial crisis.

A report from Seattle Weekly finds that more than half of all Americans say they’ve recently gone a year without dining out, in what may be one of the clearest signs of how the current economic malaise is impacting our ability to consume even the most basic luxury choices. In fact, according to recently released figures from the U.S. Census Bureau, only 49.3 percent of adults say they “dined out” between fall 2009 and fall 2010, accounting for the lowest percentage of people eating at restaurants since 2007, when just 48.7 percent of adults said they did so.…

Ten Things We’re Wasting Our Money On Now

Monday, July 4th, 2011

Despite the continuing economic malaise, American spending habits appear to be alive and well, overleveraging already beleaguered budgets hit hard by the housing crisis, high unemployment and rising unsecured debt loads. In fact, despite lessons learned from the recent recession, Americans continue to spend about 15% of their household incomes on luxury items defined by “wants” instead of “needs.”

So where (and on what) are we wasting our money this time?

According to an article from 24/7 Wall St., reviewing our latest spending habits and the changes in spending patterns over the past two decades,  “The ten categories of unnecessary purchase can be balanced against the ability of Americans to save money or pay off debts.…

The mentality of overspending and how to avoid it after bankruptcy

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Realizing we are in debt is a lot easier than figuring how it happened. Unless you can pinpoint one central reason, like the loss of a job or long-term medical issue, it can be hard to retrace your steps to financial crisis. Plus, who even wants to? The more important exercise is to figure out how to not let it happen again. And that means determining why you overspend so you can change your habits in your life after bankruptcy.

Countless consumer studies have been done about why we spend. From psychological influences to marketing, music and social pressure, there are far too many things impacting our spending decisions.…

What Average Americans Can Learn From Lottery Winners & Pro Athletes

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

It’s the same old story,  same old song and dance my friend’ -Aerosmith

Award-winning financial columnist Don McNay recently wrote an online article for The Huffington Post about the perils of overspending, entitled “Like Lottery Winners, Pro Athletes Also Blow Big Money.” In it, the part-time structured settlement consultant who has worked with injury victims, lottery winners and others who receive very large sums of money, has observed that some 90% of them will run through their money in five years or less; within two years of retirement, 78% of NFL football players are bankrupt or under financial stress; and 60% of  NBA basketball players are broke within five years of retirement—all “running through their money faster than a crazed lottery winner.”

In this blog, McNay ponders the question many of us wonder: why are these people so compelled to blow big money?…