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On a related note: I have a $250 check coming my way thanks to that very reliance on my credit card!
Or in other words: 90% of all statistics are wrong 70% of the time... :-)
The modification is that all Bills (Mortgage, Utilities, etc.) are payed through online banking and we use our bank debit card for gas and groceries only. All descretionary spending is with cash. We withdraw a fixed amount at the beginning of each month and place the appropriate amount in about 4 envelopes (General Spending, Clothes, Babysitting, Dining Out/Entertainment). If there is no money left towards the end of the month - we don't go out, don't get coffee on the way to work, etc. If there is a large clothing purchase needed (winter coat or something), we save for a month and buy it next month.
This has reduced our "over" spending quite a bit. By no means to we hit the budget each month but we've planned to be a little off and this forces us to make some choices.
Hope this helps.
I've started a similar experiment 2 months ago. And while I'm about to dissect the numbers, what I think I'll find is a marginal savings. I probably need to switch to an "envelope system" to achieve significant savings.
Although it's nice not having the large cc balances.
I adopted this model (pay savings, bills first) spend the rest with mostly by cash or debit card , since and it seems to work fairly well. At present my burn rate for cash is about $400/week, and sometimes it is a mystery as to where it goes. Perhaps the advantage of plastic is its paper trail, which reminds you every month your foolish purchases.
The model takes a bit of a hit when some big purchases show up. As I am painting a few rooms in my house, my stove died, and the car wants winter tires. So I am paying cash for these, and living like a starving student till the next paycheque.
Debt financing might be more fun (i.e. plastic), but I don't like big bills at the end of the month.
Yes, that's part of the point. If you are going to spend $400 on something using cash, you are probably going to think about it a little bit, decide that it's a good use of your money (RIIIIGHT!!!) then pull the cash from an ATM and come back to the store in a couple of days. The likelihood of going throught with the purchase is much less with cash because of the inherent "cooling off" period. Whereas with your card, it's so easy, just hand it over and sign away your $400 bucks. And once you get the thing home, you are unlikely to make a return trip to the store to return it, even if you kind of want to, because it's inconvenient.
So that's one way cash will save you money. For all the people saying they "get" 250 dollars back from their credit card so it's a good deal, I have to ask how many hundreds of dollars of extra spending they engaged in to offset that meagre $250 rebate. Unless you are determining your spending by an envelope-style (zero-based) budget, your credit card is likely *costing* you a lot of money, not saving you money.