'There's basically nothing left for splurging'

After food, rent and transportation, 'basically nothing left for splurging'
March 9, 2008

» Discuss Article    (66 Comments)

As luck would have it, Cheryl Charles' twin daughters both found careers in the mortgage industry. One was laid off just before the holidays and returned home to live with her mom, and the other moved back in to save money as the real estate market went south.

At least one of the 39-year-old twins can help pay the rent on Charles' condo in Chatsworth, which is no small matter. Americans' biggest average annual expense, by far, is for housing, including utilities and property taxes. For the typical family, housing gobbles up 33.8% of the annual budget, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. (The next-largest expense is transportation, with the cost of a vehicle accounting for 7.1% of a budget, while fuel eats up 4.6% and insurance and repairs an additional 3.2%.)

 
Charles, an executive assistant at Cal State Northridge, says she hasn't had a raise in three years, "thanks to Arnold." So she recently took a second job doing data entry for an insurance company. She works 60 hours a week and makes about $45,000 a year.

And she worries, about the economy, retirement, medical insurance and the rising costs of milk, bread and fruits and vegetables.

"Things that you want to eat on a daily basis to have a healthy diet keep going up," she says.

She cuts back where she can. If her hair needs color, she dyes it herself. A trim? Her sister does that. The only thing she has bought to wear lately was a dress for her father's funeral.

"You have to prioritize, making sure the rent is paid. You've got to get gas to get to work and you've got to maintain your car," she says. "There's basically nothing left for splurging."

She's even given up Costco. "They have good deals," she says. "But you have to pay that membership, that big $50 -- and that's a tank of gas."

She wishes that, someday, she could buy a home in the San Fernando Valley, near her office. "When you walk across the campus and see squirrels in the trees, it's so beautiful," she says wistfully. "So relaxing."

Like so many others, though, Charles doubts that she'll ever be able to make such a purchase.

"I wish it was easier for the people who were born here, and worked here all their life, to at least obtain the American dream of owning your own home," she says. "You're kind of forced to move elsewhere, where the cost of living is cheaper."

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Leslie Earnest





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Discussion

What are you doing to beat the high cost of living today?
 
1. Bonz - I was in a similar boat - no health insurance because I am self employed; then I got Blue Cross; guess what? Now I have $50K in medical bills - blue cross denied most of the bills - said they weren't covered in my policy; I had gotton the blue cross because my son had to have an apendectomy & we had no insurance -medical denied us. So I am hoping U don't get ill or have an accident; as far as the high cost of living; I know people losing everything right now - their homes, everything. Because our work was related to the mortgage industry.
Submitted by: JaneBryant
5:39 PM PDT, Mar 11, 2008
 
2. To LA Transplant...I agree with all you said, except...where did you see homes for $500k?? I lived in Thousand Oaks and our TINY 1,00 sq. ft. post war crackerbox bungalow that needed to be gutted sold for about $700K!!! (we paid $300K but that was 8 years ago) We had a 12 year old Honda Accord and ZERO debt. TOTALLY frugal. Husband made about $125K a year and that BARELY paid our BASIC bills. Condo's were running in the $500K's at least...
Submitted by: Maggie
8:27 AM PDT, Mar 11, 2008
 
3. I wonder how many people here are paying down debt or saving money? In my experience it's very few. They always talk about how they are saving money by doing this or that, but they still can't make ends meet. Why is that? It's almost always because they find another way to spend it! An extreme example of that is a 50,000 dollar car. LOL Oh, by the way....... I know this is off-topic, but my diet is going great! I have lots of great tips to help you lower your calories. As a matter of fact, I did so good today that I going to celebrate with an ice cream bar. Oh....... it's LOW calorie! I can have 2 or 3! Yeah!
Submitted by: Bryan Bates
2:38 AM PDT, Mar 11, 2008
 


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