Living for Today? Quite the Opposite
March 10, 2002 The Washington Post by Albert B. Crenshaw
After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, there were reports that
Americans had decided to throw caution to the wind and live in
no-tomorrow style.
Some abandoned their diets. Others splurged on vacations and luxury
goods. Pundits quickly drew conclusions about what it all meant for our
society. Now it turns out that what it meant was -- nothing. It wasn't
happening.
While a few people in New York may have felt for a while that the
future wasn't worth bothering about, the attacks, followed by the
collapse of energy giant Enron Corp., seem to have made most people
vastly more conscious of tomorrow, according to a survey.
Rather than throwing money away, most Americans have become more
cautious with it. Paying down debt is much more in vogue than luxurious
vacations, the survey found.
The survey was conducted by Opinion Research Corp. International of
Princeton, N.J., and sponsored by the Consumer Federation of America
and Bank of America.
Since Sept. 11, the survey found, one-third of Americans are more
interested in personal savings, and a quarter are more interested in
paying down their debts.
Thirty-six percent were less interested in luxury purchases, and 29 percent were less interested in lottery tickets.
Those who thought the attacks would leave Americans "more
present-minded and less future-oriented" were wrong, said Stephen
Brobeck, executive director of the consumer group. "A very large number
of Americans have not reacted to terrorism in this way," he said.
Another hopeful sign was that those new attitudes are taking hold among young people.
The poll also showed that around two-thirds of Americans feel
reasonably confident about the security and adequacy of their income
and comfortable with their levels of saving and debt.
The findings suggest that Americans are rediscovering the virtues of
saving money and cutting debt. If the sentiments are followed up by
actions -- and Brobeck said there is some evidence of that happening,
at least with debt -- the outlook for millions of families will be much
brighter.
The tide isn't lifting all boats, however. While two-thirds are
doing better financially, the other third continues to struggle, and
many of them are slipping into bankruptcy.
The split has interesting implications for credit card issuers, many
of which aim to find customers who manage to limp along indefinitely,
never managing to pay off their debts but never defaulting either. As
growing numbers do pay off their debt or default, card issuers are
seeing increased pressure on their profit margins.
But weep not for the card issuers. The benefits to the U.S. economy
and to the country generally will be immense if Americans really get
control of their finances.
If there is one thing the Enron case demonstrated, it is that
workers must look out for themselves because no one else will. As much
as Congress and the Labor Department fulminate, no one is going to get
the Enron workers' money back. And no one can remove the market risks
from a retirement system that leaves workers to do their own investing.
Education and diversification, desirable though they may be, don't
guarantee investor success.
Beyond that, only about half of American workers have an
employer-sponsored pension or retirement plan. The rest have only
Social Security and their savings.
Under those circumstances, workers and their families need very much
to do what the new survey says they are doing: Pay down debt and save.
Getting rid of debt is a key. A debt-free family is much better
positioned to ride out an economic setback. If income declines -- for
example if a wage earner is laid off -- the family can tighten its belt
for a while. But that's a lot tougher if there's a big "nut" of debt
service to pay every month.
Consumer debt allows you to have something now, when you don't have
the cash, but it also makes that item cost more, often a lot more.
Saving for expensive items is hard at first, but those who do it find
it gets easier. That isn't just psychology. Save and your money works
for you, earning interest. Buy on credit and the reverse happens as
more and more of your income is consumed by debt payments.
A number of groups offer information and other assistance to would-be savers.
The Consumer Federation and Bank of America are pushing their
"America Saves" program through local organizations around the country.
It promotes saving for a variety of goals. The Employee Benefit
Research Institute and the American Savings Education Council run the
"Choose to Save" campaign, focused on retirement saving.
Both programs have Web sites (www.americasaves.org and www.choosetosave.org).
You can get their brochures by sending a self-addressed, stamped
envelope. For America Saves the address is Box 12099, Washington, D.C.
20005-0999; for Choose to Save, it's EBRI/ASEC, Suite 600, 2121 K St.
NW, Washington, D.C. 20037-1896 (include 99 cents' postage on the
self-addressed envelope).
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