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More than half of Americans with an income
of $100,000 a year or higher say they're living
paycheck to paycheck.
This may be the result of a sneaky behavioral
phenomenon called lifestyle creep.
Lifestyle creep is the common pattern of making a
little more money and starting to spend a little
bit more money. It happens almost
automatically. I think people hold these
benchmarks in their mind.
If I reach this position or I get this promotion or
I make it to this age, then I can live this life,
or then I deserve to have these things, and then
they kind of go a little crazy or go a little wild
on it, and then it becomes like a trade off,
like they only can enjoy their present happiness
and they're not able to save or plan for the
future.
There's nothing wrong with wanting nice things.
The mental, emotional reason why we want to
acquire more is generally rooted in this need for
your perceived value.
We live in a world where the nicer car you drive,
the higher your perceived value is.
Six out of every ten people surveyed said that
paying for everyday expenses negatively
impacted their mental health.
It does take a lot of joy from just life and always
being in this scarcity mindset when there isn't
necessarily a scarcity to fear.
Here's why Americans feel like they're constantly
struggling to keep their paycheck, even when they
start making more money.
Say you get a new job and you have a little bit of a
pay bump, suddenly there's a little more room
in your budget. You know, maybe you do some small
upgrades, like you eat out rather than cook at
home, or buy those Taylor Swift tickets or upgrade
your music subscriptions.
Anything like that is an example of lifestyle
creep. It's just these little upgrades that are
very hard to undo financially or even
psychologically once you've made them.
A lot of people have this scarcity mindset around
money, and they spend so much of their lives
saving, saving, saving.
And so there can be this point where if you're
constantly saving your whole life, and then you
finally reach this marker of financial success, or
you finally reach this big paycheck number, you
feel like you finally deserve to enjoy your
life.
The idea that people save and they just hit a point
where they feel like they deserve it.
I fully disagree with that.
Most people don't have $1,000 in the bank, like
most people cannot handle a tire blowout, or they're
going to put it on credit. There is no
financial literacy, no financial education that
happens. The average person does not think
about lifestyle inflation at all.
I think it's something that's not even on the
average person's radar.
Coming out of the pandemic, there was a
strong desire to go out and splurge on
experiences, maybe take a trip.
This is often referred to as revenge spending or
revenge travel.
Research shows that young adults are particularly
susceptible to this.
They feel discouraged by higher prices and making
ends meet, so they might feel like they'll never
have enough money to retire anyway.
They might as well enjoy themselves now, unlike
perhaps their parents were, young adults need to
be more responsible for their retirement because a
lot of the safety nets that maybe their parents
had, like a pension, no longer exist or are
extremely rare, so they need to contribute to
their own 401k if they want to shore up their
financial security.
There's something about spending a little more
than we should that can feel like rebellious or
bad, and it often can be a reaction to our family
culture around money, or parentified or
internalized rules around what we can give
ourselves. And some people might overspend as
like revenge against these rules, and some
might look at someone who's overspending and
think, and kind of label them as all bad or all
good. And there can be a lot of guilt and anxiety
around the consequences.
Spending is a way for us to meet one need, one
another isn't met.
I was 19 years old when I entered my first corporate
job. I was still figuring out how to adult as well
as how to be in this corporate world, make an
income, which for sure led to overspending.
I was sad, so I would shop.
I was getting serotonin through shopping.
And then that led to me accumulating over $30,000
of credit card debt, and I had to figure out how
the heck I was going to pay that off.
When you're spending is dictated by emotions or
depriving yourself or holding back your needs,
that's when it becomes problematic.
I generally like to think of lifestyle inflation in
sort of two buckets. You have like your general
idea of what lifestyle inflation is, which is the
buying fancy cars, the buying nice things along
those lines. And then there is lifestyle creep
that's more like regular everyday things that if
you're living paycheck to paycheck, you're going
without, like going to the dentist, getting oil
changes on your car.
Right? There was a time in my life when oil change
was just like, not even a priority.
Like I'm trying to keep tires on my car.
I'm trying to keep it running. I'm trying to
keep the registration paid. I'm not concerned
about an oil change, right?
More than 60% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck
as of September 2023.
That, along with inflation, can have
serious financial consequences. Many
Americans also don't have emergency savings to fall
back on. 63% of workers say they wouldn't be able
to cover a $500 emergency expense.
You know, there's that saying, 'being poor is
really expensive' because then when it is time to
get basic maintenance on your car, it ends up being
way more expensive than you were planning on it
being because you haven't done basic maintenance.
And that can go well beyond car trouble.
46% of Americans said they have a balance on
their credit card because of an emergency expense,
according to a Creditcards.com survey,
10% coming from car problems, 11% to cover
unexpected medical bills and 10% for home repairs.
Because of inflation and higher prices nearly
across the board, people have been having a harder
time making ends meet, and often that means
turning to credit cards to fill in the gap between
what you need to buy and what you can actually
afford. Credit card rates are over 20%.
That's the highest interest that you'll
likely find anywhere unless you're getting a
payday loan. Credit card debt can really spiral out
of control, and pretty quickly.
The solution to get what you need when you're in a
position when you don't have it, it really is to
just make more money.
It sounds like a simple solution, but it also
sounds like a condescending one, right?
You tell somebody who is doing the best that they
can that they need to make more money.
The solution to make more money isn't really
realistic.
The experts that I talked to said, it's okay to
treat yourself as long as you've built in a buffer
in case something comes up and you want to be able
to find that balance between enjoying your life
and your emotional well-being and your
financial well-being.
Marbrisa Flores describes herself as a recovering
supersaver.
I would describe a supersaver as someone who
maybe is now in a position where they do
have some sort of income, some sort of stability,
but it's a certain mindset that keeps you in
scarcity mode and afraid to spend on things that
you may need or want and kind of affect your
lifestyle in that way.
My way of saving it was to hoard it.
And the tough part is that saving for the sake of
saving, it's not very reinforcing, but it can
kind of be addictive.
And there's momentum in that.
I wouldn't advise going to that extreme.
It does take a lot of, I don't know, a lot of joy
from just life and always being in this scarcity
mindset when there isn't necessarily a scarcity to
fear. After working with a wealth coach, I
continued to save because I was still very kind of
would put me at ease in that scarcity mindset.
Like I felt at ease having kind of my savings.
I continued to save money, but in a more
intentional way, with the intention being of
spending it.
When you're in scarcity, you're feeling this
anxiety. My first thing that I like to tell
individuals is forgive yourself for what you've
done in survival mode.
I think I like to divide it between, you know,
what's essential, what's, you know, an actual bill
type of expense versus a lifestyle.
What's a choice that you take on to spend money.
For example, a choice to go out drinking and having
fun, but there's also not the choice you have to
make that car payment. You also have to put gas
in that car for it to go, right?
So there's things that you can't avoid and
there's things that you have a choice to do and
you can adjust.
Value-based spending is what I teach.
And it's where you sit down and you really
evaluate, one, where am I spending my money right
now, and am I being reactive, or am I being
proactive in that?
Am I spending my money in places that really have
value for me, or am I spending my money in
places that I think I should be spending my
money because of outside influences?
And once you have an idea of where your money is
going right now and looking at am I aligned
with this? Is this something that I actually
value?
The goal here is to find balance.
It's about finding ways to spend in the moment,
and also how you want to spend your money in the
future. So it's about enjoying your life, but
not being so focused in a future that hasn't come
yet or too much focus on the present.
The idea is having your cake and eating it too.
You can have bites of your cake right now and
then save some cake for later.