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Actions you can take that help your personal economy and make you feel good

by David M. Doolin, PhD on November 1, 2009

For a while, I was posting regularly on financial and economic matters. The need for that passed as the news became common knowledge. That is, the problems became real for ordinary people, not just for nutjobs screaming from the fringe.

But it’s not over yet. Even if the recession is officially over, the recovery will be anemic for years, until all the bad debt is either inflated away, or those liabilities are sold for market value to customers paying (essentially) cash money.

There are many things we can do individually. Most of these things are actions that the government and large corporations are panicking about. Unfortunately, large corporations and the government are working at cross-purposes to us, the taxpayers, who have to take care of ourselves no matter what the economic conditions or the tax rates.

Here’s a few things to consider:

  1. Vote against every congress person that voted for the bailout bill. The bailout just “kicked the can” into years hence. When the bills come due, they will be bigger. That’s just math.
  2. When possible, vote for congress people over the next few years that will reinstate all the financial controls we dismantled allowing this to happen.
  3. Move your money to locally owned banks with no exposure to any of these “toxic instruments.” I do not know which these will be.
  4. Stop spending and start saving. We have a deep recession coming in any case. There is nothing we can do about it. Everyone stopping spending and starting to save could result in a real depression, but the powers that be haven’t really left us any choice in the matter. The national economy isn’t as important to me as my personal economy.
  5. Save for retirement, but don’t plan on retirement. That option is closing for people of middle age. I spoke with a woman at work last year, and she has lost over 50% of her life savings. She won’t ever retire. She can’t.
  6. Get out and stay out of debt. Not only have so many people lost so much in their retirements, they are also in debt that they will never, ever be able to work their way out of.
  7. Make sure you are prepared for disaster, which could be financial or from earthquake or whatever. Keep a couple of weeks water on hand, and month’s worth of cash. ATM only work when there is electricity and cash inside. Financially, I believe that danger has passed, but if you are in California (or Pacific Rim), you are still earthquake prone. Be prudent. Hedge for “worst case.” It won’t hurt, and it will make you feel better.
  8. Bust your ass at whatever job you have, and get a second job if you can. My father was able to find work all through the Great Depression. He would work for whatever they paid him, he had to support his mother.
  9. Be glad if you aren’t chained to a house you cannot afford. I was infuriated I was priced out of the market for so many years. Now I am delighted I am not sinking under that weight. If you are chained, I personally won’t fault you for walking away. It’s what the bank would do, so you should consider it too.

I suspect very strongly the world is going to look very different two years from now. This may not be a bad thing. It certainly provides those of us that were never able to stake a claim in the current system the opportunity to carve out a niche in whatever is coming.

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November 4, 2009 at 6:27 pm

{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

Bob Hayles November 6, 2009 at 7:11 am

You are right on everything except number 5. Short a total collapse on the order of the depression of the 20’s and 30’s, retirement savings will recover…the market ALWAYS recovers eventually, and that won’t change.

I’d like to reinforce your admonition to “throw the bums out” with a caveat…make sure it’s JUST the bums…like bailout supporters, for instance. There ARE good people in congress…albiet few and far between, but they are thwere. Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater no matter how much you scream, “I’m mad as hell and I’m not gonna take it anymore!”
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Dave Doolin | Website In A Weekend November 8, 2009 at 6:33 pm

@Bob – My dad was raised during the depression, so I got an earful of it myself. Actually, that’s not quite true: I was raised with those values. He didn’t actually speak much of it.
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Sean November 9, 2009 at 9:35 am

Still working on it. I have some debt to get rid of, but I’m making progress.
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Dave Doolin | Website In A Weekend November 9, 2009 at 6:11 pm

@Sean – you’re on it man.
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Anna December 16, 2009 at 5:30 pm

It’s astounding how Americans get themselves into such heavy debt and don’t think twice about it. Or at least, not three times.

It’s just another way of making a population (or government, or anyone) easier to control. Coax them into heavy debt.

I strongly agree with anyone and everyone getting and staying out of debt.

On the savings point, I would differ slightly. I would definitely agree on saving (cash, food, water, or whatever) for unforeseen events. However, I also think that if a person has the money to invest in expanding his business, he should do so. I am currently spending a large chunk on outsourcing, as I realized that otherwise I would never expand business to where it needs to be and to the income level it needs to achieve. I basically reinvest just about any extra (or not so extra) income that I have, for the development of better streams of income.
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Dave Doolin | Website In A Weekend December 16, 2009 at 5:35 pm

Good to see you back, Anna.

Definitely agree with reinvesting. Takes practice.
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Anne January 11, 2010 at 10:29 am

For years my husband complained [still does sometimes] that our house is too small and it was all my fault. Well, I let him choose the house I just chose the price range. Now he is grateful we own a house with a mortgage we can afford to still pay even with only one of us working. I agree we need to save more, spend less, and think about the future instead constant instant gratification. What’s more important – the latest technology that is outdated the instant you bought it or retiring at 65 [or there abouts]? Retirement is possible but only with sacrifice.
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David M. Doolin, PhD January 14, 2010 at 4:29 pm

@Anne – Sometimes, I wish I had just borrowed to the hilt, traveled all over the world, and just declared bankruptcy so that people like you could pay for my sins.

But not very often. =)

Just not wired that way.
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