eric | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 13 2006 | shopping, money, personal finance, dining, cooking
A blog entry examining whether or not eating out is actually becoming cheaper than eating in. The takeaway? In some cases, it may be more cost effective but it's rarely healthier.
Quoted: As an experiment, Rob Cockerham spent all of February 2004 “eating in”, consuming only food from grocery stores. He calculated that he spent $11.55 per day on food and drink. (If you subtract alcohol, he spent $8.65 per day.) He spent 48 minutes per day preparing food.
eric | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 23 2006 | personal finance, money, financeWomen's Personal Finance Blog has a great post on managing money which is not at all exclusive to women.
eric | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 19 2006 | Warrenn Buffett, investment, business, finances, personal finance, bankruptcy, celebrity
A very article in the NYT regarding squandered wealth. The quotes from Buffett are, as always, good but they're a bit misleading. He actually did require funding at the beginning of Berkshire Hathaway. He told a group of family and friends to give him their money and that he would invest it on their behalf. While not debt, per se (since he had no real obligation to them), it certainly had the same psychological burden and is more money than most of us will ever require to fund an enterprise in our lives.
Quoted: Questioned in 1991 about the reasons rich people hit the skids, the multibillionaire investor Warren E. Buffett told an audience at Notre Dame that debt and alcohol were ever-present culprits in financial demise. “I’ve seen more people fail because of liquor and leverage — leverage being borrowed money,” he said, according to a transcript of his comments. “You really don’t need leverage in this world much. If you’re smart, you’re going to make a lot of money without borrowing.
Quoted: “I’ve never borrowed a significant amount of money in my life. Never,” he added. “Never will. I’ve got no interest in it. The other reason is I never thought I would be way happier when I had 2X instead of X.”
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