I come across the statement "I need more money", sometimes from people who work good jobs.
Reminds me of a quote. Someone once asked the multi-millionaire (yes, the old timey one) John D. Rockerfeller "How much money is enough?", he replied "Just a little more". If you have more money you'll definitely find a way to spend it.
10. Savings account. Ever since I've signed up for my savings account 21 months ago, I've only made one urgent withdrawal. The interest that you accumulate is amazing and if you withdraw it, you lose a months worth of savings. It's a really good incentive.
For this i recommend
uBank (owned by NAB). They tend to have the highest interest out of absolute anyone. If your money isn't in a savings account, its slowly losing its value due to inflation, not to mention that the bank is short changing you on all the interest you could have been making.
13. Credit cards. No. I will probably never sign up for a credit card, even though I do have control it's still a hassle. You don't want to be paying more fees and having the risk of going into debt. Use a debit card, or better than that just use bank cards with a reloadable visa from the Post Office (my method).
All one big scam. A credit card companies favourite customer is a poor one. They will just pay off the interest and not the balance, they'll be a constant cash cow. One of the reasons they exist is because employers and people who control the money flow weren't paying their workers enough. If you don't pay your workers enough though, they cant continue to consume and buy the things you make. They didn't fill that gap by massively lifting wages, the average person has the ability to consume more because of credit.
18. This leads me to my next point - CARS. Now I know many of you are 18+ so getting a car is mandatory, right? No. Cars are expensive as shit and degrade in value a lot. Let's do some math:
Forgot fuel in that alongside maintenance and other things as well. I read an article the other day that riding the bus instead of taking your car can save you ~$10,000 a year but i think it was written for America. Unlike most of your other tips though, i feel like it doesn't apply to everyone. Some people just plain need a car, maybe you have really shitty public transport either from your house or at the destination to where you're going, it might make either so impractical or perhaps even impossible to get where you need to go. A lot of jobs require you to have your own transport as well, so, by trying to save money you could actually be costing yourself money.
There's also the money value of time (i'll mention more below). If it takes you 3 hours to get where you want by PT but its a 40 minute drive, that time can really add up. It might justify the money cost to save all that time.
Just keep in mind what the teleological (end goal or purpose) of what money...
is. At the end of the day its a medium of exchange, it lets you buy things, thats its purpose. There is no use hoarding money like a squirrel hoards nuts if you have nothing to spend it on or no goals to spend it on, ever. You'll just be inflicting pain on yourself (although if you ask a Buddhist monk, you shouldn't desire these things in the first place). I think the real idea here should not be just saving for the purpose of it but saving so you have more money to spend on the things
you want to spend it on (wisely) or your goals.
Reminds me of one particular forum member. They don't spend much on other things but when they do spend their money they spend it on a good whiskey because thats what they enjoy. I think its important to take into account the joy and happiness value here; sometimes that exceeds the monetary loss of a product (
bonus). Almost everyone is looking to lead a good or happy life, so, constantly saving on absolutely everything might not be all that pleasant.
Lastly, i just want to mention the time factor. Time is the only thing you cant buy or bring back. Sometimes you have you ask yourself whether saving X money is indeed worth the time or the forgone pleasure. If i save $10 by walking home from the station instead of walking 1 hour home from the station, thats not a trade im going to make. To me its not worth sacrificing an hour of my life (which we'll never get back) doing something i don't want to, in order to save $10 every now and again (not to mention friends have had weapons pulled on them/beaten up around here, its a rough area to walk home at 3am on a Saturday night). It's the same deal with spending hours to find $0.20 off a cable or $5 off a computer part or something, it might just not be worth it. Similar idea with all the transport related ones as well, time is valuable (according to Deloitte, your free time is worth $8 an hour apparently).
Finally, as someone else pointed out, avoid being unconstructively critical. Like anything in life, these tips won't be for everyone. It's fine to point out things that might not have been considered but everyone has different goals and ideals. It's also important to keep in mind intent; people who have shared tips in this thread did it with the
intent of helping people in this community and contributing regardless of the end product of that intent and how you feel about it. Finally, lets not forget one of the prime rules of this community, no personal attacks (either implied, by intent or overt) or insults.