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Evaluate the True Price of Dining Out to Save Money

August 31, 2011 By MelissaB 14 Comments

Our culture seems to be one that is centered around dining out.  When you are younger, you meet friends at a restaurant for a night out and to chat.  As you get older and have a family, you may go out to eat because time is short between working, raising a family, helping with homework, and doing housework, among other things.  Some people are extreme and eat out for every meal because they do not like to cook or have not learned to cook.  This is so commonplace in the American culture, that we don’t often question these expenses.  Instead of just assuming that going out to eat or grabbing take out is a necessity, evaluate the cost of your restaurant purchase.

It has been a stressful day, and you would like nothing more than a night off from the kitchen.  You decide to buy take out for your family of 4 and spend $25.  True, you did buy yourself a night out of the kitchen by avoiding cooking and washing the dishes that you would use.  Yet, ask yourself, would you have paid $25 to hire someone to come to your kitchen for an hour that night, make a meal and do the few dishes that you used?  No?  Well, that is essentially what you did by picking up take out.

Riced out.

I use this way of thinking frequently now to save myself from spending money eating out.  My family ate out by habit until I started evaluating the true cost.  I recently quit my job and have been doing freelance work from home.  Several of my smaller jobs each pay $20 a month.  Recently, I wanted to go out for sushi, which is a weakness not only of mine, but of my husband and kids.  When our family of 5 goes out for sushi, it typically runs us $55 to $60.  I asked myself if one meal of sushi was worth doing 3 additional small jobs to recoup the $60?  Although the jobs do not take much time weekly, I would have to do the three jobs for a month to recoup the money spent on sushi.  Was it worth it?  No.  We did not go out that night.

The idea of evaluating life energy for consumption is not new.  It was the subject of the book, Your Money or Your Life by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robins.  The overall principal is to look at the amount of time and money it would take to recoup an expense.  I try to use this in my life normally, but I find it especially effective when considering the often inflated price of dining out.  Take the sushi dinner for $60—my family’s weekly grocery budget is $100.  Is that one meal worth half a week’s groceries?  Definitely not.

I am not saying we shouldn’t go out.  My family still enjoys going out, but I am suggesting we should stop thinking of dining out as something routine and to be done daily or several times a week.  Instead, think of dining out as a treat and something to be planned and enjoyed.

photo credit: dslrninja

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: Consumerism, Saving, ShareMe Tagged With: cooking, dining out, eating out, family, food, frugal, frugaler, Saving

What if Everyone Was a Frugaler?

June 15, 2011 By Shane Ede 16 Comments

What if everyone in the world was as frugal as the most frugal?  Inspired by conversation on the Early Retirement Extreme forums about the ethics of the Early Retirement Extreme lifestyle.  So, the beginning of that linked conversation (if you haven’t read it) is based on the premise that if everyone did as Jacob does and lived the ERE lifestyle, would the world collapse?  And, if so, doesn’t that indicate that the ERE lifestyle is not socially responsible (ethical)? Which, got me to thinking.  What if everyone was as frugal as most of the frugalers we know? What if frugal was normal?

I’m not talking about the people who hand wash their Mercedes, either.  When it really comes down to it, the ERE lifestyle is pretty similar to the frugaler lifestyle.  Each has their extremists.  So, what if everyone was frugal?

Would we all make our own shampoo?  Would we all have a sustainability garden?  Would we all coupon?  Would coupons still exist?

Pink Piggy BankIt’s an interesting question.  Many of the things we all see and do each day exist because a much larger section of the population use them far more regularly than we do.  Disneyworld, for instance, probably wouldn’t exist if it’s only customer base were frugalers.  What about those Mercedes cars?  Probably not in the U.S.  But, if you think about it, there wouldn’t be very many used cars available for purchase, since we’d all be busy driving them until the wheels fall off.  What would that do to the auto industry?  If all the people who buy a new car every year, or even every five years, stopped doing so?  You thought they needed a bailout a couple of years ago!  They’d really need one then.

We might see more local farms growing a larger variety of goods because more people are shopping at farmers markets and taking advantage of the Co-Op farms.  We might see less McMansions and more smaller houses with big yards and gardens.  We might see some pretty drastic changes in the pricing of some things.  Without all the willy-nilly spenders out there paying whatever the manufacturer asks for the product, you might see more reasonable pricing to get people to purchase a product.  We would likely see a return to a more craftsman foundation, much like the early retirement extreme lifestyle.  People might be interested in making things themselves if the market dynamic shifted that drastically towards the frugal side of things.

How do you see the world changing if everyone was as frugal as the most frugal?

photo credit: kenteegardin

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Consumerism, economy, Frugality, ShareMe Tagged With: early retirement extreme, economy, ere, ere lifestyle, frugal, frugaler, market

Supply and Demand Goes Both Ways

March 4, 2011 By Shane Ede 13 Comments

Supply and Demand.  We all learn about this tenet of the capitalist market at a rather early age.  It’s a pretty simple concept really.  When one increases the other decreases.  As supply grows, demand diminishes.  As does the price for that product.  As demand grows, supply diminishes.  And price goes up. It’s a function of our market.  And, I think parts of it are broken.

As a frugal blogger, I’m constantly wracking my brain trying to find new ways to be more frugal, and new ways to present that information to you. Part of that includes keeping an eye on the market.  And as such, I’ve come to the conclusion that the law of supply and demand has become more of a guideline than a law.

How so?

Take airfare for instance.  According to this CNN Money article, airfare prices have been raised twice as many times this year as they were all of last year.  And we’re only in March.  What allows them to do that and get away with it?  You keep paying for the tickets.  Gas goes up, and we still fill up our SUVs.  As long as you continue to pay the prices they are asking, the prices will continue to go up.  And, recently, they’ve gone up anyways.

We all know that some of the things that we are buying are too expensive.  I read several articles a day about how expensive somethings have gotten and ways to save money by making your own, or frugally using what you do buy.  And, to some extent, that does work.  For a select few.  But, there are others who are willingly paying that price and then complain about it afterwards.  Why?  They’ve been conditioned to do that.  When was the last time you heard of a boycott based on the price of a good, rather than something the company did to offend you?  Do you think that if even half of the consumers boycotted flying for a month, that prices wouldn’t drop?  They’d have to or they’d have to go out of business.

Why can I buy a ticket from Fargo, ND to Las Vegas, NV for less than $150, but it costs me 3x that much to fly to San Antonio?  It’s not 3x as far.  Why can I buy a bag of malt-o-meal cereal for $2 that tastes exactly the same as a name brand cereal but I can’t buy that name brand cereal for less than $3.50?  The examples of this are plentiful.

We aren’t just consumers.  We have brains and are capable (in most cases) of thinking with them.  It’s time we used them to demand fair prices for products.  We’ve forgotten that supply and demand goes both ways.  We do have some small modicum of control here, but we’ve grown complacent and forgotten that we have it at all.  Many of you are frugalers.  But, we always say that we’re doing it to save money.  And, that’s true, but maybe it’s time we also say that we’re doing it to protest the high prices that we’re being charged.  Oddly, saving money isn’t always a good enough excuse for some people.  Sometimes they need a moral soapbox to stand on.  And, maybe that’s the way to take back supply and demand, and turn it into a working machine again rather than a pleasant theory in economics textbooks.

What say you? (So Say we All.  If you’d watched BSG, you’d get that.)

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Consumerism, ShareMe Tagged With: Consumerism, economics, frugal, frugaler, Saving, supply and demand

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