living check to check is unnaceptable

xXOGLEGENDXx

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Nothing but truth here.

The problem is a lot of people don't know about saving after college. And society keeps telling them that they need to live a certain lifestyle. So budgeting is now a thing of shame. My first job out of school, I was making $26K, but cut out so many things I didn't need and had a roommate and was able to put $500 in my savings a month.

People need to learn to save and not have unnecessary expenses.
 

infamousred

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I understand people falling on hard times...but because of bad spending habits? Yeah it's absolutely pathetic. :francis:
 

Uncle Kendrick

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We had a thread about this way back when it was first posted. I created a spreadsheet and shared it with the brehs on here.

The spreadsheet shows you how much you could save if you manipulate these numbers in the table. Instead of increments of $1 you can chose to do $3 or $5 and so on. It was pretty neat. A lot of the brehs dowbloaded it. I used and saved $3K from january to october

Reupload the spreadsheet bruh :feedme:
 

CrimsonTider

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Even if you have a savings you are living paycheck to paycheck

If you depend on the next paycheck to settle bills that are due than you love paycheck to paycheck

Not living paycheck to paycheck is having other sources of income
 

Bless't

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I live check to check... because I dont want to touch my savings.

No kids.

I like raising my savings.

:yeshrug:
 

SeveroDrgnfli

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I used to think the same thing until I realized plenty of rich people live check to check. We have a debt based society too. I don't hate anymore. We all owe somebody in this bytch, only thing I hate on is being unemployed.

I remember when I realized I made 60grand on my own. I looked at my life and I had a family, luxury car, custom wardrobe, an assistant, a massive ego, a serious coke problem, and two places to live.

Sometimes people aren't responsible with money man because they weren't taught how to be. I was taught how to be successful not how to save money. In my head the more money I made meant the more I had to spend. Nobody told me it wasn't sustainable.

I actually didn't count my money. I had no idea what I was making or spending. Lol sometimes I'd be broke and I find checks or bands in my car or pants. I'd get so high I'd hide money and forget where I hid it. I still haven't found any of those stashes. Or the drugs I hid. What a,waste of money.
 

Scientific Playa

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Tell the wealthy to stop being greedy then. The tax payers shouldnt have to keep bailing out these bankers who kept making the same mistakes. These people literally just move money all day. No skill or trade. A plumber or a mechanic are practically more valuable then them.

i read something this morning that had me smh. the u.s. treasury is supporting multinationals that pay little to no tax while the average working joe is shelling out 20 to 40% of his income on taxes.

Why the EU's Tax Probe of Multinationals Is Raising U.S. Ire
The European Union's campaign to crack down on tax avoidance by multinationals has drawn criticism from the U.S., which says it is unfairly targeting American companies.
Aug. 25, 2016, at 11:30 a.m.

The European Union's executive branch rejected Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016 the U.S. government's complaint that its probes into sweetheart tax deals between EU governments and big companies are hitting U.S. firms hardest. MARK LENNIHAN/AP

By LORNE COOK, Associated Press

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union's campaign to crack down on tax avoidance by multinationals has drawn unusually public criticism from the U.S., which says it is unfairly targeting American companies.

The EU executive Commission responded with a sharp denial on Thursday, insisting it is being fair as it goes after corporate tax dodging.

The EU's investigations of multinationals trace their origins to a 2014 leak of documents that showed how big companies shop around among EU states to get as low a corporate tax rate as possible. That helps multinationals often pay very little tax, a revelation that has fueled popular anger in Europe, where cash-strapped governments had been raising taxes on households.



The high-profile companies that have been caught up in the EU action since then include Amazon, Apple and Starbucks.

Here are some questions and answers about the issue.

WHY DID THE EU LAUNCH THE TAX CRACKDOWN?

European countries are keen to attract big companies to their territory; sometimes too keen, with some offering ultra-low tax rates as incentives. So the EU launched a drive to combat tax avoidance by investigating the deals that allow multinationals to slash their bills in countries like Luxembourg, Ireland and the Netherlands. The EU says some 50-70 billion euros ($56-79 billion) are lost every year due to tax avoidance. Also, some multinationals shift their earnings made in EU countries to the one low-tax country they are based in. That helps them lower their overall tax bill. In January, the EU Commission, which polices EU rules, unveiled new plans to tackle the problem. They include closing tax loopholes and improving the way tax information is shared across the 28-nation EU.


DON'T EU COUNTRIES MAKE THEIR OWN TAX LAWS?

They do. The Commission says it's not interfering with members' rights to set their corporate tax rates, but that it should help protect countries from unfair tax competition. When one country's tax policy hurts a neighbor's revenues, that country should be able to protect its tax base. The EU rules also try to ensure that a country can effectively tax profits generated in its territory. A big problem is that EU countries share little information about their corporate tax rulings. This makes it difficult for tax authorities to work out where a company's real business takes place and apply the rules fairly. The Commission says many multinationals take advantage by shifting their profits from one country to another. This deprives EU governments of tax revenues.

WHY DOES THE U.S. GOVERNMENT CARE?

The U.S. Treasury Department says that disproportionately targeting U.S. companies could end up costing American taxpayers. This would happen if companies are forced to pay higher taxes in Europe because these businesses get U.S. tax credits for foreign tax payments. Apple and other U.S. firms leave much of their foreign earnings overseas to avoid higher U.S. tax rates. Treasury officials say they're working to get companies to repatriate those funds.

ARE U.S. MULTINATIONALS REALLY HIT HARDEST?

The highest-profile multinationals to be investigated by the EU — Apple, Amazon and Starbucks — are American. But the EU Commission says there is no bias against U.S. companies. It notes that Italian automaker Fiat was targeted last year, and that 35 mostly European firms were impacted this year by its ruling against a Belgian tax scheme. The Commission says all companies that generate and record profits in an EU country should pay taxes in line with national tax laws, no matter whether they're based in Europe or abroad.

Why the EU's Tax Probe of Multinationals Is Raising U.S. Ire
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

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Tell the wealthy to stop being greedy then. The tax payers shouldnt have to keep bailing out these bankers who kept making the same mistakes. These people literally just move money all day. No skill or trade. A plumber or a mechanic are practically more valuable then them.
None of this shyt has anything to do with what The Man Who Lives With His Wife N Bei'Ma In The Same House™ is talking about.

If you are making more than like $35K/yr, and you don't live in NYC or SF, you should be able to put something away every month. A lot of people knock "working for the man", but "the man" often pays its employees to save. My company puts an extra $4K in my 401K.

But yea if you don't have access to like a year's worth of emergency funds AND some kind of long term retirement plan you are in a dangerous place IMO.
 

Wild self

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Yep. You're in extreme danger dawg:francis:

That's me :yeshrug:

But If I have to innovate to live below my means, in order for my savings to look like a rainforest, I will do so and improvise.
 

lotteryplaya

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It is not easy to think about and deal with. Most people will die in debt but long as you are alive keep trying to get on top.



booty-dance-boondocks-o.gif
 

Weaver31

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I feel the OP.

But cutting expenses can be tough. People got bills, habits, unplanned circumstances, etc. Some men may have to provide for a woman and it's hard living off one income nowadays because shyt keeps increasing and some well most homes are designed for two incomes. Also children and child support can be costly. Then if u a social person that likes to go out....u know that can cost because most of us wanna drink and eat something.

Cutting expenses can mean cutting people out yo life and can mean living like a hermit. Plus some folks work a stressful job, have a spouse or gf/bf that's worrisome and one may need to have an outlet to deal with all that.

But ur tighter should save something every month regardless....even if it's $20.
 

intruder

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Yup. No lie. 2 months ago had to loan the fukka $135 to get his phone turned back on. Finally got my money back last Thursday.

And he doesn't have student loans so he has no excuse.
 

Gonzo

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Glad that I live below my means and saved LOADS MORE MONEY THAN THE REST. Like, If I feel like my savings under 80k, I feel like in extreme danger.

people want to live a ballin IG lifestyle, but complain about bills :what:

Counterproductive post. How the hell would +80k just sitting in savings be beneficial? You're pouring jelly on your self
 
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