How to spend less money
Oliver Burkeman shares ideas on how to tighten your purse strings, while still enjoying a few simple pleasures
Are you looking at your post-holiday bank balance with trepidation? Itโs easy to judge yourself for being undisciplined with money, but modern life is expensive โ and money, psychologists have long recognised, plays countless tricks on our minds. It gets tangled up with our emotions, so we spend in an effort to feel better, even though that usually doesnโt work.
Itโs abstract, so we struggle to keep track of it: for example, studies show people spend more when they use credit cards because they make money feel less real. Even if you stick to a budget most of the time, just one or two exceptions a month โ for home repairs, birthday gifts and so on โ can mess up everything. Fortunately, you can use what psychologists have learned to trick your mind in the opposite direction, so youโll spend less and save more.
Take advantage of the โHawthorne effectโ
In a classic psychology experiment, factory employees worked harder simply because they knew researchers were watching them. Likewise, make a note of every single expenditure (you could use a pocket notebook, or your phone) and youโll almost certainly find yourself spending less.
Pay yourself first
Itโs a cliche, but thatโs because it works: if you possibly can, make sure some of your pay is automatically rerouted to a savings account as soon as you receive it. Once that money โdisappearsโ, you wonโt miss it; youโll adjust psychologically to having a smaller amount available to spend. But, if you wait until the end of the month to save whateverโs left over, that might be nothing.
Donโt be too frugal
Being overly strict with yourself can backfire: we all crave a sense of autonomy, so when the rules youโre following are too severe, itโs tempting to rebel โ even if technically the person youโre rebelling against is yourself. Itโs no good saving a pound here or there if your rebellion is a ยฃ100 splurge. The best way to handle this temptation is to give in to it, but consciously: assign a modest weekly sum for sheer pleasure, then make sure you spend it.
Work out what it really costs
The finance guru Vicki Robin recommends calculating what you truly earn per hour โ and to do that accurately, she points out, youโll need to subtract money you spend in order to do your job (work clothes, commuting and lunches). Then, when youโre considering a purchase, youโll know how much of your life you used up working to pay for it โ and you might choose not to.
Oliver Burkeman is author of โThe Antidote: Happiness For People Who Canโt Stand Positive Thinkingโ (Canongate, ยฃ8.99)
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