Using A Debit Card To Control Spending
By Jay Fleischman, New York Bankruptcy Lawyer on May 6, 2007 in New York
Many of my clients ask me about ways to control spending after bankruptcy. For these people I recommend a debit card.
With a debit card you never need to worry about carrying around cash. If you carry cash then your money has a tendency to disappear. For example, you take out $20 from the ATM and go into a store, where you purchase $18.43 worth of groceries. The single dollar and change go into your pocket, and soon disappear as minor purchases are made. At the end of the day you’ve spent $20.
Turn the tables and make this a debit card purchase. Go into the store and spend $18.43 on groceries. Leave the store and go about your day. Chances are excellent that at the end of the day you will have spent $18.43, not $20. Why? Because the extra cash in the first scenario is too small for you to take note of. When you spend it, you don’t notice it - a pack of gum, a newspaper, maybe something to drink.
This runs counter to the tact taken by Debt Hater, who is giving up the use of a debit card in favor of cash. She’s going so in order to curb her “flex” spending, and I’ll be interested to see how this works out for her.
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