Engineer
Elite Member
- Oct 9, 1999
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Originally posted by: Skoorb
It's all about the state of mind to me. It starts becoming very gray as to whether you truly were going to buy it or not, and it's not just me saying it, the statistics behind it are quite clear: people simply spend more when they are using credit, quite a bit more. And on things they may not otherwise buy. It is the financial equivalent of adulteryOriginally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: Skoorb
ignore the noise about 0% intro rates on a new love seat or whatever else in the same vein.
If you have money and are going to buy anyway, I disagree about ignoring the 1 or 2 years intro 0% rates. Why not let your money earn interest at their expense for a few years, eh?
Like paying for everything with a credit card to get the 1.25 to 5% rewards (paying if off at the end of the month, of course).
I use mine sometimes for a couple of days between pay checks (we normally budget quite closely and extra money right at insertion point hits savings, so we don't keep a ton in checking) but the most i've had it up to in many months is about $600. I generally pay it off every two weeks or less, i just fvcking hate them.
For the most part and most people, you are correct. As for credit cards, I use them to make money. Sure, I might spend a little more than I would if I only used cash, but it's made up for by the playing of the system. Not recommended for the general population though!
