Archive for the ‘General’ category

Unemployment Rate Reports Are Not What You Think They Are

November 13th, 2008

Welcome Carnival of Personal Finance readers!  Thanks to MoneyNing for holding this week’s Carnival!

If you’re like me and you’re lucky enough to have been employed almost all of your adult life, including some teen years before you were an adult then you’ve probably spent slightly less time thinking about unemployment.  However, the numbers I keep reading have gotten my attention.  Supposedly we have lost over one million jobs in the United States this year (and its not over).  I was reading this quick, but easy to read article on how to read unemployment statistics and have some further thoughts.

The first thing is this: not all jobs that are lost indicate that positions elsewhere didn’t open up, companies are hiring, its just harder to find the same position for more, or possibly the same wage.  I know that sounds only partially optimistic, but you have to remember that jobs do exist and it is not as if highering has ceased completely.  Some companies release workers in one place and hire them back on in another position elsewhere.  I am aware of people who were hired on in an alternative positions after being told they would be released from their current positions.

The second thing is that companies are looking for qualified employees and often that requirement is on-site staff.  Some companies, like one of my clients, are willing to hire remote contractors who can work from a distance as long as they get their job done.  If you’re a company based in Dallas and Yahoo! lays off 1,000 qualified and well trained individuals (or 10 for that matter) those individuals have to be willing to relocate to take the job openings that might exist elsewhere.  If a company is hiring but no qualified individuals are available they either don’t fill the position, compromise and hopefully can train up a candidate, or they could outsource or contract out the position.  This impacts job statistics.

I am very concerned about the state of the economy because we are really reaching a point where the symptoms of the problem are reaching into many, many sectors of the world economy.  However, I don’t prefer to just take statistics at face value because I’ve written a statistics package before and I know that not all numbers actually report something useful.  I regularly had users request features that made absolutely no sense.  It wasn’t that the reports were not based on numbers, its just that they were reflecting reliable or accurate information.  The Unemployment reports are very, very similar in that not all information can accurately be taken into account.

This morning I got up extra early to have coffee with a friend and as we talked he told me that his finances were tight and that he wasn’t able to make money very easily at his sales job.  He has a job, but its not delievering an income.  He’s skewing the numbers because he counts as an employed individual, but he’s not getting very much commission.  This is probably not very uncommon.

There is one upside to the possible unemployment situation: its probably causing folks to evaluate their lives and their relationships.  More families are probably attempting to get out of debt and save money to deal with periods of unemployment.  Of course the downside to the same information is that foreclosures, which are often tied in with financial despair and unemployment seems to have a higher right along with divorce.  So unemployment can have some impact on divorce rates and marital tension.  I am still researching this to get more solid numbers and figures and you can expect another post about that information hopefully soon.

While this post hasn’t been the most inspirational of posts, I wanted to draw readers’ attension to the facts, to the problems in the reports, and to the idea that there are some non-employment related details that all folks need to consider.  If you’re employed, attempt to save as much money as possible to weather a period of unemployment.  if you’re unemployed make sure you’re looking all over the United States (or outside of the United States) for jobs because it may be that a relocation will net you a new life with a better job, even if you have to deal with climate changes.  Tough times are tough, but they’re also the opportunities for growth and finding deals that don’t exist in better times.  Keep and eye peeled and let me know what you think.

Formula Four-Oh-Nine

November 8th, 2008

Nothing chaps my hide like when I discover I’ve dropped hundreds of dollars on something that I could have NOT dropped hundreds of dollars on.  For example: I just installed a new dishwasher at my house in the last couple weeks.  Roughly $409.00 worth of dishwasher.  It is a dishwasher that I might not have needed had the previous dishwasher been installed correctly and had the previous owner, who installed the other dishwasher, not been a cheapskate instead of a frugal appliance installer.  You see most dishwashers could use a handy contraption called an Air Gap [picture of one at Amazon.com].  The air gap prevents backflow, which prevents funky dishes, possibly jamming up your drainage line and a bunch of other things.

My old dishwasher probably could have used this and when the dishwasher repairman came out BEFORE the problems got bad and suggested things he didn’t mention this as a good idea.  So if you have a dishwasher and its not cleaning your dishes as well as it should, you might confirm that this contraption exists (or doesn’t exist) on your line, and if it doesn’t, get one!  It cost me less than $20.00 to get the air gap preventer, 72″ of rubber tubing and a few clamps to make sure that my dishwasher drains appropriately.  I could have saved $389.00.  Lesson learned!

Zinger!

November 7th, 2008

I was listening to the NCN podcast when NCN said something that was simple, and yet not stated so clearly before (to my recollection) in word or print:

“…not just living on less than you earn, but living on less than you earn minus what you need to save.”

For context, go listen to the podcast (and subscribe while you’re at it).

Why We Should (NOT) Tax the Wealthy More

October 27th, 2008

What if your company where you worked were bought out by another company and in that acquisition you were offered $100,000.00 as a bonus for the acquisition?  Would you take it?  In the state of Colorado where I live taxes on that money, including federal taxes on that money would put you at having 40% taken in taxes (without itemized deductions and what not).  That would be like actually getting 60,000.00.  Would you still take it?  Oops, I forgot something.  The Federal Government actually takes a bonus 20% on top of that for them because the money is a lump sum.  That would leave you with $40,000.00 out of an original $100,000.00.  Would you still take it?

Sure, you’d still want the money, but I think that the recent hullabaloo that I’ve heard recently about taxing the wealthy (AKA ‘rich’) to distribute the wealth is not as forthright as it sounds.  There are two (or more) areas that concern me about this.  The first is that recent numbers show that just under 40% of the entire nation’s federal income tax is generated by the top 1% of America’s earners.  That’s right, the ration is that askew [see: http://www.taxfoundation.org/taxdata/show/23440.html].   The second is that in my own household if I am strapped for cash: I have to either go into deeper debt (which I’m digging out of) or I have to cut spending.  I can only go so far deep into debt, so we cut spending.  If the Federal government wants to get their budget together, they too, should have to cut spending and not raise billions or trillions of dollars in debt.

Here’s the kicker: if you add on sales tax which there is the potential of the $40,000.00 being spent ‘in state’ you could see up to 10% MORE tax being taken at the register depending where you go shopping.  That means that out of the original $100,000.00 the person who was rewarded by their company has now had 70% taken in the form of taxes.  That would make me want to throw another tea party.

I know that as a country we’re all trying to see equitable charity, the furtherance of our families and the general well being of the population, but if we can’t afford wellfare programs because we don’t have enough money, if we can’t afford to pay for a massive military (which is a hot topic and I won’t attempt to address it in this post), if we can’t afford to watch our airports with a crack squad of TSA agents (who fail to find my pocket knife every time I forget I have it with me) then we need to cut things.  This hurts.  This could impact jobs, this could impact the entire nation.

Here’s an opportunity for Americans to be innovative again.  This nation had a time of prosperity that was unbelievable.  We had brilliant thinkers making brilliant products brilliantly.  But we’ve passed that and now we’re all hoping to be lucky enough to make it with the next e-business, dot com super-story, or sue someone else for their money.  But what if brilliant people worked together to make new brilliant products that we then sold to the rest of the world just like the ‘good old days’ only it was now?

Well, if that were to happen we’d tax the snot out of those brilliant people and punish them for their productivity.  I think I’d prefer to just shuffle along and make moderate wages and not be taxed up to 70%.  This isn’t Bill Gates’ problem.  This isn’t Warren Buffet’s problem.  This is your problem.  It’s my problem.  It’s our problem.  Lets vote next month (not too many days away, now) with a conscience.  Lets send a message to our representatives that we’re not going to take it any more.  We, as a people, have a right to the fruits of our labor and at present we’re not looking out for one another, and it makes me sad.  The good news is that there are ways out of where we’re at.  It will take determination, and it might hurt a bit, but if we can make a united effort, we might just be the United People of the United States.

A Pause That Refreshes

October 24th, 2008

My buddy Trint over at ‘Surely You’re Not Serious’ is doing a chocolate drive.  The drive raises money to buy chocolate for troops in Iraq who are injured.  Apparently the only thing better than chocolate would be being home, but if they can’t be home, having chocolate makes their days.

Please consider dropping by and finding out how you can help.

Shadow Boxing and Taxes

October 23rd, 2008

Click on the following link to read what Trint wrote up on taxes and the historical background for the word silhouette. http://www.surelyyourenotserious.com/blog/?p=787

I love taxes and personal finance and history all worked into one post.  Keep it up, Trint!

Laptop Locks: Not This One!

October 20th, 2008

If you have a laptop (and I happen to have one and a half) and you buy a lock for it, consider the model and design.  As the video here shows, some of them take almost nothing to get unlocked. The video shows a Kensington lock being opened with a small cardboard tube. Not a good use of your money, or preservation of your technological expenditure.


Laptops’ LockClick here for more home videos

$20.00 less for Gas

October 19th, 2008

I just paid $20.00 less for a tank of gas than at the height of this year’s gas price gala.  Strangely the price of petroleum has not gone up to the astronomical numbers that were predicted before.  Numbers of multiple hundreds of dollars per barrel.  Instead the ‘invisible hand’ balanced the market out.  Prices went higher, consumers used less.  My family really needed to drive more since the school year started, and the more expensive gas got, the more we pinched pennies in other areas to try to offset the expense of gas.  The good thing is that we can rest for a week while prices are lowering – they’ll go back up soon enough, but at least that gives us a reprieve.

How much more or less do you drive depending on the cost of gas?

Dish Washer = Wish Dasher

October 18th, 2008

Our dish washer is on the fritz.  Time to replace it so that it

1) Cleans the dishes

2) Stops leaking water onto the kitchen floor

The good thing is that we can do it.  The bad thing is that we have to.  Any strong recommendations would be greatly appreciated!

Icky

October 17th, 2008

Not that you need to know, but the number of hits since the economy has ‘tightened’ has not fluctuated a lot.  The number of visitors from search engines with naughty phrases about making money having sex has gone up.  I think I’m losing relevance and my blog’s title is causing me SEO problems.

Icky.