this post was submitted on 20 Jan 2024
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Work Reform

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A place to discuss positive changes that can make work more equitable, and to vent about current practices. We are NOT against work; we just want the fruits of our labor to be recognized better.

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[–] PP_BOY_ 65 points 5 months ago

Cool way of blaming it on the average person. More like "Here's why jobs don't pay enough"

Not blaming you OP, I know you just copied the title of the article

[–] [email protected] 38 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Is there a non video answer for those of us who prefer text?

Anyway. I remember talking about lifestyle inflation with a coworker a couple years ago. I said I could probably squeak by on $50k/year*. We were both guys living alone at the time.

He was like "how?? Like, you need at least $1000/month for food alone."

I said, what? How are you spending that much? I budgeted for $300 but I'd likely hit half that with some effort.

He was like "Well you go out to dinner, you buy drinks for your friends, it adds up"

"You don't go out for dinner that much when you're on a budget", I said. "Or buy rounds of drinks."

"Oh," he said. "I guess not, huh."

--

I did have to make a rule in relationships to not discuss finances because it would cause me pain. Like one person in particular was a great person, but they never made a budget and were always in debt. And they'd be like "I'm going to go to California to visit friends for a week". Killing me. You don't have the money for that. Every dollar you spend on this enterprise is more like 2 because it's carried on credit card debt. But I learned to keep it to myself because no one wants unsolicited advice, and it is cruel for our system to deny people fundamentals like seeing friends and family while others have mega yachts.

* This is heavily predicated on me not having any outstanding debt, which is unusual I think. I never carried credit card debt, but my student loans were only a few hundred a month and I'm old enough they're paid off now. If I had $500/mo in debt I think $60k could squeeze by. It's possible I messed up my math, though.

[–] SoleInvictus 19 points 5 months ago

This reminds me of my ex. Her family was wealthy, my family was not. I got through college by working and taking student loans, as did she, but she was reimbursed by her parents for all of her expenses at the end of each semester. I got nothing.

So she'd start each semester with loans in excess of what she needed for tuition by thousands of dollars and a huge payment from her parents for the previous semester, all of which she kept instead of paying off her loans. Without fail, she'd need to start borrowing money from me by the end of each semester because she'd spent it all going out drinking with friends nearly every night.

It used to piss me off so much. I was budgeting hard because I had no other income while she was out partying all the time. She eventually left me because I wasn't going out with her as much because I couldn't afford to, especially because she kept using my money to support her lifestyle. In retrospect, I dodged a bullet.

[–] adrian783 6 points 5 months ago (2 children)

it's impossible to be in a relationship and not discuss finance unless you just straight up do not intend to be in any committed relationships.

the easier way is to not be in relationships that you're not financially compatible.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

I have been in numerous relationships where we did not discuss finances in any detail. We'd talk about like who'd pay for dinner, but not larger stuff like "are you saving enough for retirement" or less at-hand stuff "is that Netflix subscription really worth it?"

Not every relationship is monogamous marriage with merged finances. Sometimes you date for a couple years. Sometimes you're polyamorous. There are many options for relationships.

Edit: your last point has truth to it though. Finding partners who are financially compatible is a plus.

[–] Anticorp 3 points 5 months ago

It's possible to be in a monogamous marriage without talking about it too. I just outlined how that works for me and my wife as a response to the same comment you replied to.

[–] Anticorp 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

My wife and I have been together for almost 20 years and we almost never talk about finances. She has her own bank account, and her own money, and I have my own bank account and my own money. We have a joint account that we both have auto transfers into on paydays to cover our joint household bills. I make more than her, so I contribute more to the bills, so that we have about the same amount of money after everything is paid. Then that's it! She doesn't need to ask me or talk to me before buying something she wants, and visa-versa. I even bought a car once and didn't talk to her about it. She was excited when I brought it home. I highly suggest this accounting method for couples. I've been in a relationship before where we had all our money as a single household pool, and it fucking sucked! We were always arguing about things we each wanted. Anyways, the point is that it's not only not impossible to be in a committed relationship without talking about money, it's probably actually the preferred method (at least it is for us).

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I agree with this, it seems like the best solution to me.

I think where this gets tricky is with kids and retirement.

How would you address that? If you've got more saved for retirement does that mean you would retire early while she is still working? How does the household budget work when she isn't working because she just had a kid? I guess you'd just contribute the full budget?

[–] Anticorp 1 points 5 months ago

She always worked, so I never had to answer the kid question. That does get tricky. As far as retirement goes, that's also something we haven't had to think about yet. We both max out our retirement contributions, and save some extra money on the side. I'm older, so I probably will retire a few years earlier, assuming either of us are ever even able to retire. Social Security retirement age will probably be raised to 100 by the time we're retirement age. It's a conversation we've had a couple of times, but never very seriously. I know we're both treating it seriously though, so there's that.

[–] [email protected] 35 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (3 children)

It's not "lifestyle creep".

When I moved from Canada to the Netherlands, my salary stayed roughly the same, but the amount I saved every month exploded. The Netherlands has much higher income taxes, but it should be noted that I also enjoyed some pretty sweet tax incentives as a skilled expat.

The relevant differences between the two environments were:

  • In Canada, paycheques come every two weeks. In the Netherlands it's every month, so you have to lean to pace yourself.
  • In the Netherlands, your paycheque isn't 1/12th of your salary after taxes. Instead they actually withhold around 12% your salary and pay it out to you in a lump sum partially in December and again in May. You're still getting the same amount, but you're forced to budget on a lower monthly amount, while enjoying bonuses twice a year. I used the bonuses to pay down my Canadian debt.
  • The Dutch don't live off of credit cards the way North Americans do. While in Canada you're taught to "build up your credit rating" by using a credit card, in the Netherlands, many people don't even have a credit card. Purchases are typically made with debit cards instead. Unlike Canada, these cards don't apply a fee to your purchase either.
  • They also don't really care about credit ratings. Instead, there are laws that restrict you from buying or mortgaging at a monthly cost higher than x% of your monthly income.
  • Car ownership is drastically reduced there. While in North America people flip out at the idea of 15min cities and refuse to believe it's possible to live without a car, people do it every day there.
  • Finally, and this one may be more specific to me, going out for a meal is a bigger deal there and typically more expensive. Dutch culture expects lunch to be a home made ham sandwich or just a piece of bread, chocolate sprinkles and some buttermilk. Meanwhile I was used to blowing $20/day on eating out for lunch and often went out for dinner too. The amazing quality of food you find at their grocery stores meant that we often collectively bought groceries for office lunch every day, and I cooked at home.

In the space of 2-3 years, I paid off my credit cards (~$10k) and what was left on my student loan (~$12k). Inside of 5 years, I had tens of thousands of Euros in my bank account.

[–] 314xel 31 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

They also don't really care about credit ratings.

Exactly. Credit scores are a scam and an incentive into having a credit card and overdrafting.

Instead, there are laws that restrict you from buying or mortgaging at a monthly cost higher than x% of your monthly income

It's called "level of indebtedness" or "financial burden" and it's typically 40% of net monthly income. So you cannot get a loan that would put your total monthly installments (counting all of your credits) above 40% of your income.

[–] 314xel 24 points 5 months ago

The Dutch don't live off of credit cards the way North Americans do

in the Netherlands, many people don't even have a credit card

And I would say most of Europe.

When I pointed that out in another thread, people got butthurt.

[–] 314xel 9 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

And I would add that if you are behind with your installments, creditors can only hunt you down for 50% of your income (subtracting any other credits you may have / owe), so you don't typically go bankrupt because of loans. Of course, for a mortgage, you do lose the house, but I'm talking about general loans so-called "for personal use".

[–] Vorticity 26 points 5 months ago (2 children)

What this talks about is part of the problem. It is very easy for to treat yourself a little every time you get a raise and for that to become the new normal. I certainly did that when going from school to my first job and as my salary rose in that position. I had to really sit down and put together a budget before I could start saving.

Bigger parts of the problem are salaries not keeping pace with inflation and insane housing costs.

Yet another cause is lack of financial literacy. We aren't taught how to budget and save. Some may be taught by their parents but many don't get that. Schools certainly won't teach financial literacy. That would hurt consumer spending and that wouldn't be good for short term corporate profits and continued economic growth so it won't be in our curriculums.

[–] PP_BOY_ 14 points 5 months ago

The American education system is entirely hijacked by corporate interests. See the Food Pyramid lie for a good example. There's no incentive for the corporations who fund public schools to teach financial literacy when frivolous spending and paid-with-credit are so much more profitable.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Yet another cause is lack of financial literacy. We aren’t taught how to budget and save. Some may be taught by their parents but many don’t get that. Schools certainly won’t teach financial literacy. That would hurt consumer spending and that wouldn’t be good for short term corporate profits and continued economic growth so it won’t be in our curriculums.

I realize I have no idea how financially literate or illiterate the average person is.

When I was planning on moving out, I opened a spreadsheet on my computer. Maybe that's already a leap beyond what the typical person would do?

I made a row for each expense I thought I'd have, rounded up to create some headroom. Plus a row for 'Other' with a sizable number to account for stuff I hadn't thought of. Summed that up.

Made another row with my gross pay. Looked up about how much I'd keep after taxes. About 70%. Calculate that value on another row. Divide that by 12. That's monthly net take home.

Compared that number to the number from the first section. If I'm not taking home more than my expenses, that's a problem.

What is everyone else doing? No one taught me that. It just seemed like how I'd add up my expenses and compare to my income. It's not perfect, but it helped me see what kind of rent was way out of reach.

[–] Vorticity 4 points 5 months ago

Yeah, you did the logical and smart thing. I think many people don't and, for some, it is a daunting task to even get started. The part I was missing was being told "it's okay if it's not perfect, just do something close and adjust as needed". It was always something that I felt needed to be all or nothing, even if that's not logical.

Just having a two day intro to budgeting in high school or college would probably have done me a world of good. I doubt that I'm the only one.

Previous generations had classes like "Home Economics" to teach sime home skills but it has been decided that isn't needed. Those useful skills classes have been cut from the curriculum.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Your guys' lifestyles are creeping up?

[–] boatsnhos931 12 points 5 months ago (1 children)

What the hell is this 'raise' you speak of?? Is it similar to a raisin??

[–] PR3CiSiON 12 points 5 months ago

It's what you get when you switch jobs

[–] Godric 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

TLDR: They ain't saving money and thus have poor financials.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 5 months ago

And it can’t be that companies are raising prices and keeping the profit while blaming it on inflation! No!