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The Expensive Produce Myth

June 7, 2010 By Shane Ede 10 Comments

When many people discuss buying more produce (fruits and veggies) the most common complaint is how expensive it is.  How can they afford to pay that much for fresh produce and still feed their family?!?  Well, I think it’s a myth.

Based on my recent visit to the grocery store, the price of produce is actually pretty good.  Let’s compare for a minute.  A quick trip down the meat aisle will tell us that a chunk of meat of whatever shape or size will likely cost us about $3 a pound.  And that’s the cheap stuff.  No t-bones here.  How about the other aisles.  Hamburger helper?  About $3.  Plus a pound of hamburger, a cup or so of milk, and some margarine or butter.  Chips?  Doritos were on sale for about $2 a bag.  I think that’s about a 10 ounce bag.  Frozen Pizza?  I saw some that were 5 for $10.  Smaller ones, sure, but pizzas.

Apples

Now, lets take a look at produce.  Apples were $1.49 a pound.  Oranges were $1.89 a pound.  Potatoes were about $1 a pound.  Onions were $1.38 a pound.  Broccoli was about $2 a bunch.  The list goes on.

Sure, none of those, by themselves, is a meal.  Very little of the first list is either.  But, if you eat an apple before dinner or as an appetizer, it makes you fuller.  Which means you’ll eat less of the other, more expensive stuff.  Maybe you replace 4 ounces of steak with a 9 ounce apple.  Even at a 2:1 ratio, you break even.  If you manage to cut the meat even further back and replace it with other veggies, you’ll save even more!

And I won’t even go into the savings on medical costs that could be gotten from eating more fruits and veggies.

The bottom line is that expensive produce is a myth.  It’s only when you don’t stop to consider that it’s replacing something else in a meal that you realize that.  If you replace something, you can buy less of it at the store.  And you will spend less.  Sure, costs might stay the same, or even go up, if you don’t reduce what you buy based on your new eating habits.  But, that food will last longer.  Give it a try and then compare your budget sheets from before and after.  I think you might be surprised by the outcome.

Filed Under: General Finance, Home, ShareMe Tagged With: eating, food, frugal shopping, meat, produce

Enjoy Your Money! How to Make it, Save it, Invest it and Give it

June 2, 2010 By Shane Ede 1 Comment

Enjoy Your Money!: How to Make it, Save it, Invest it, and Give it

By J. Steve Miller

Occasionally, authors approach me to read and review their books.  I usually do so, happily.  I enjoy reading, and anytime I can get a book to read for free, it makes my wife happier.  It’s hard for her to argue about my getting more books when they are free.  So, that’s my disclaimer.  J. Steve Miller sent me a copy of this book to read.  He also sent me a copy to give away, which I will be doing in the coming weeks.  Both are autographed too!

So, on to the book.  I’ve never read a finance book that was written in the same way as this book was.  Most of them are so matter of fact that they are beyond dry.  I have to take toothpicks an prop my eyelids open to finish reading them. (I exaggerate, but you get the idea)  But, this book was actually fun to read.  I think the pivotal reason why is that it’s written in a conversational tone.  Very nearly like most of the fiction books you would read.  Instead of just spitting out the facts and information for us to chew through, Miller gives it to us with a story.

Now, I can’t say that it’s an award winning story by any means.  There’s only so much you can do with the topic, after all.  The basics of the story follow a group of high school students (the counterculture club) as they are taken under the mentoring wing of a teacher from their high school.  Over several weeks worth of breakfasts at “Hash Browns” diner, she teaches them some key tenets of personal finance like ways to save your money, smart investing principles, and also ways to enjoy your money once you have it working for you.  There’s several places where the dialogue makes it seem as if the students are the ones feeding the information to us, which breaks the story facade, but if you ignore those, the story is quite good.

Despite the few flaws in the story, I think Miller makes an excellent attempt at making personal finance easy to learn.  The book was great for me, but I think it would be even better as a tool for teaching high school aged children about finances.  I can’t say for sure if that’s what Miller intended, but I would guess it is.  I think it would make an excellent addition to the curriculum of a school.  It would hit a roadblock with some of the religious undertones, so you may have to just buy a copy and gift it to a high schooler you know.

You can pick a copy of it up at Amazon for $15.99.  (Or you can wait for the giveaway and try your chances there.)  For more information, (description, sample chapters, author interviews and reviews) see the press page here: http://jstevemiller.com/blog/?page_id=578

Filed Under: Books, Guru Advice, Investing, Saving Tagged With: book, book review, enjoy your money, finance book, j.steve miller, personal finance books

I Won the Lottery! Almost.

May 26, 2010 By Shane Ede 5 Comments

I won the lottery last week.  Almost.  Not quite, but almost.  I suppose I would have had a better chance if I still played the lottery.  I used to play the lottery off and on by myself, buying a ticket now and again, when the jackpot was several hundred million.  Then, I joined a group of people at my work that pooled our money together and bought lottery tickets with that.  Eventually, when I began listening and reading more on personal finance and then found Dave Ramsey, I quit paying the idiot tax.  Happily, I spent that $10 a month on something more worthwhile.  Like debt repayment.  And it was a good decision.  Until last week.

Last week, the group of people that I used to play the lottery with won.  Not the jackpot, but the second highest prize.  All 5 numbers without the magic ball.  $250,000.  There were 19 in the pool, and, after taxes, each will receive about $9700.  When I first heard, boy did I feel stupid.  What was I thinking?  I could have had a share of that!  Do you have any idea what $9000 could do to my finances?  It could eliminate my remaining credit card debt.  What was I thinking, dropping out of the pool?

Then, as I had more time to think about it, I came to my senses.  The odds of winning that prize were 1 in 3,900,000.  You have better luck finding a fresh lightning strike and getting struck by lightning right then and there.  Which doesn’t mean it couldn’t happen.  It did.  But, for each of those 19 very lucky people, there are thousands of people who bought a ticket and will never win.  I can’t say that I’m not still slightly jealous of the winners.  More so because of the “it could have been me” mentality than because I begrudge them the money.  Some of them truly could use it.  But, if they could use it, why are they playing the lottery.

Which is why I wasn’t playing.  I could use the money.  So, rather than spending my money on things like lottery, I was putting it to work for me.  As fate would have it, the pool that I used to play with won.  I see it, now, as a test of my financial resolve.  How many of those 19 will have spent the money on frivolous things and then be complaining in a month or two about how they have all these bills?  All while putting their money in to play the lottery, just in case lightning does strike twice?

I’ll keep plugging away at my debt.  And one day, when they’re still playing the lottery, hoping to hit it big and get rich, I’ll have made myself rich with the money I’m not spending on debt.  Now, does anyone know a good way to make my friends understand that?

Filed Under: General Finance, Saving Tagged With: gambling, idiot tax, jackpot, lottery, winning

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