- Home >> Lifestyle: Dollar
Savers:
The Difference Between Wants and Needs
-
- The
Difference Between Wants and Needs
- By Jeffrey Strain
So you want to become wealthy?
While there is no single road to getting there, it's a sure bet
that one principle is in place for those who keep their wealth
over a lifetime. Live beneath your means. Spend less than you
make. Don't spend more than you can afford. It doesn't come any
simpler than this. If you want to create wealth, you have to
learn to do this. It doesn't matter if you make $10,000 a year
or $1 million, if you don't learn how to master the step of spending
less than you earn, you'll never create lasting wealth.
While the concept is simple,
chances are you are not following it. In all likelihood, you
are living paycheck to paycheck, treading water. No matter how
hard you try, you never seem to get ahead. Even when the raises
come, the money still disappears just as fast. If this sounds
like your situation, you probably have not mastered the difference
between needs and wants.
First, it's important to realize
that wants and needs are not the same. When you read that sentence,
you probably said to yourself, "Of course, everyone knows
that." Again, while everyone may know this intellectually,
it is a good bet that you aren't completely honest with yourself
when it comes to the things you purchase.
How many times have you heard
(or for that matter said yourself) "I absolutely need (fill
in the blank)" when in reality the meaning was "I really
want (fill in the blank)?" I can't live without those shoes...I
will die if I can't have that ring...I simply have to have that
car...the list can go on and on. Please don't get me wrong. These
are phrases that we all use. That is why it's important to step
back and remember that wants and needs are not the same.
It's important at this point
to make clear that taking the time to critically look at your
current lifestyle and what are the true needs versus those things
that are convenient wants will go a long way in saving you money
and enabling you to spend less than you make. Let's take an example
of your TV. Is your TV a need or a want? Although I can hear
the arguments already rationalizing why a TV is a necessary part
of your life, the truth is that it is more than likely a want.
In most cases, it is probably an affordable want (The exception
may be if you decided you had to have that 50 inch state of the
art plasma television with the price tag of a small car). The
question is whether the digital cable TV, 6 premium channels,
satellite dish, the on demand movies, the DVD player with movie
selection, etc are all also affordable wants?
Here is a list. Take a few
moments to jot down what is a need and what is a want.
shoes
designer suit
water
large apartment
bed
ice-cream
lottery tickets
car
entertainment center
club membership
lunch
concert tickets
trip to Hawaii
medicine
necklace
computer
daily espresso
cellular phone
golf clubs
furnishings
Unfortunately, the answers
to these questions are not completely black and white. What may
be a want for one person may be a necessity for another person.
For example, let's take a look at a computer. If you make your
livelihood on the computer, then a computer is a necessity for
you. If you only use a computer to play the latest online games,
then it isn't. Knowing this, we can still make some pretty good
guesses as to what are wants and what are needs from the above
list for most people. Shoes (and clothing in general), water,
bed, car, lunch, medicine and furnishings are good bets to be
needs. Now that doesn't mean that the latest model, 4 wheel drive
sport utility vehicle with all the extras counts as a need for
most people, but basic transportation to make a living does.
A large apartment, computer
and cellular phone may or may not qualify as a need depending
on your particular circumstances while a designer suit, ice-cream,
lottery tickets, entertainment center, club membership, concert
tickets, trip to Hawaii, necklace, daily espresso and golf clubs
all probably fall into the want section.
If you can take the time to
start being honest with yourself, you will find that a lot of
the things which you assumed were an absolute necessity until
now are in reality nothing more than wants. Once you distinguish
between the two and look at these issues objectively, you have
placed yourself in the position to live within your means by
simply asking yourself whether or not an item or service you
are about to purchase is a need or merely a want.
Copyright (c) Jeffrey Strain
_______________________________________
Jeffrey Strain has published
hundreds of money saving articles and the creator of the Daily
Money Saving Challenge Program. He is the co-owner of http://www.savingadvice.com/ -- a website
dedicated to saving you money.
_______________________________________
ARTICLE POSTED
MAY 30, 2007
|