erejacob | 13 years ago | on: The death of index investing (2008)
erejacob's comments
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
Permanent residents (like we are) will have their own sewer hookup (a hose coming out of the RV which is tied into a receptacle in the septic or city sewer system), electricity, and water. So it's more like living in a small house that could technically be driven away. Every few days I have to empty the tanks which, since everything is permanently hooked up, means pulling two levers that flush the tanks into the sewer. It takes about five minutes to empty them and I can go and collect my mail while that happens.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
http://neworleans.craigslist.org/search/apa?query=&srchT...
Usually underpriced places get snatched up within a day, much like any other good deal on craigslist, so set up an RSS feed and monitor it constantly.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
BTW, I'll take that bet. We have a joint account, so it's pretty clear where the money is going.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
Of course one can suffer these things without having the risk factors. I presume the experts who calculated those numbers corrected for that.
So in about half the cases (half the cost to be precise), sickness really is your fault.
One of the reasons high deductible plans have such low premiums despite not screwing people over with small print is that they attract a more healthy segment of the population, because a high deductible creates some incentive to avoid those [preventable] diseases.
As it is, people are only hit on their regular expensive plans if they smoke. Imagine if they were also hit with higher premiums if they were overweight (BMI>25, 2/3s of Americans are overweight), drank too much, smoked too much, didn't engage in regular physical activity, etc. Then the premiums for those who have a lifestyle which wasn't likely to cause chronic diseases would only pay half of what they're currently paying. Those who engage in risky lifestyles would see their premiums increase by 50%.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
As someone else noticed in this thread, it's more of an attitude.
Also to clarify a bit, the method I recommend is more about crushing pounds or dollars than pinching pennies. It's much easier to attack a few large expenses like housing, transportation, and food than worrying about hundreds of little things.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
The general trick to owning expensive equipment is to find something with very little depreciation (usually top quality items) and buy used. This makes the carrying cost rather low. For example, my hand planes for woodworking are $300+ each, but I could sell them again for 90%+ of what I paid for them, so my effective cost is only thirty bucks. A brief search on the net reveals one can get 2000 paintballs for $30. Now I don't know if they're any good or not, but that sounds pretty cheap to me. How many shots for a game? 100? That's less than two bucks.
So I think you could do it pretty cheaply if you "invest" the money and do the organizing footwork.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
Tax laws differ by income. If you make less, taxes go down. The capital gains tax goes away. Dividends become qualified.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
The millionaire next door [there or to be] types---the silent majority?---may get caught in the crossfire.
However, having seen this recession coming from two years away and having tried to warn people about it only to be told by some/many that there's no problem and everything is fine, etc. I can't really sympathize that much, sorry. While it may not be someone's fault for being laid off or not being able to find a job, it certainly is their fault for not having the savings to cover two years of unemployment given the known 20% risk of it. I don't feel smug about it. I feel exasperated having told people who proceeded to do nothing. And now they want my sympathy?
The Cassandra complex comes to mind. Given how I come across to you, it indicates that I'm just a poor salesman when it comes to getting my point across to your demographic.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
On the other hand having money that was put into savings instead of stuff creates the feeling of power and potential. When I started saving I counted my net worth in cars (because consumerism was still my frame of reference). Imagine walking past a car lot and knowing one has enough money to buy 1-2-3, .... later 8-9-10 ... today dozens of cars (now I count in houses instead ;-) ) on the lot in _cash_ is a very interesting and positive feeling. It's the feeling of being in control and essentially being able to do what you want. Things no longer happen to you. One has financial agency. This is completely different from a reactive mindset.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
Since the salary for an academic scientist is rather low, I could have made the money MUCH faster as a long haul trucker. At $17.5/hr a framing carpenter apprentice is paid substantially better than a grad student. At $37/hour a journeyman level carpenter (after 4 years as an apprentice) would make nearly twice as much as a postdoc. A watchmaker (2 year education) makes 40k. Yes, skilled tradesmen make that much. I never knew.
Had I known back then what I know now, I would never ever have gotten the degrees I did. It was and is one of the most inefficient means of making money I can imagine. Other than being a sign spinner or a dancing pizza (which still pays more than being a research assistant with a MSc, no kidding). I would have way more resentment towards the system if it wasn't for the fact that I enjoyed my work at the time. This enjoyment probably saved me from wasting my money on stuff to compensate for my lack of happiness working.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
Granted if one gets so sick so as to max out the deductible every year consistently, one's life expectancy is probably not that long
If one stays healthy, unused money in the HSA becomes the equivalent of an IRA and can be used for nonhealth-related expenses after a certain age (I forget whether it's 59.5 or slightly higher).
I actually opted out of my employee plan when I was working in order to get in on this for the tax deduction. (My employer wasn't offering HSA eligible plans.)
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year
Are you positively sure you have the cheapest rent in town? We lived in the same city for two years before we found a place that was 30% cheaper. Go to craigslist and set up an RSS feed. The underpriced places don't stay on the market for more than a day before someone snatches them up.
erejacob | 14 years ago | on: How I live on $7,000 per year