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According to the government’s figures, inflation was a modest 2.7% over the twelve months ending in March. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ popular measure of economic changes affecting typical consumers in the United States. It’s a figure we often compare to after-tax savings interest rates, reminding us that our funds locked safely away in FDIC-insured banks are losing real value every day. Even supposed high-yield savings accounts are no match for the government’s figures.

This comparison doesn’t make sense on an individual level because the CPI is not an individual measure. Overall, we can look at the economy and see that an increased number of people who are saving and the increase in savings account balances coinciding with a bigger spread between the interest rate earned after tax and the CPI can be bad, but any individual cannot use this information to make financial decisions.

The Saver’s Dilemma is that as a whole, we tend to save more when it’s less financially advantageous, avoid debt when it’s cheap, and spend recklessly when we would be rewarded for saving. Furthermore, the government’s numbers hide the reality that individuals deal with. Personal rates of inflation are often much higher than official statistics, due partly to limitations in the calculation and partly to individual spending patterns. It helps to remember than savings accounts are primarily for cash that you need within a year, including an emergency fund, so the interest rate should be mostly irrelevant.

Here’s a rundown of some of the flaws or limitations of the Consumer Price Index:

  • CPI focuses on urban consumers. Rural consumers may have different experiences that are not reflected in the calculation. This may help to hide price increases that millions of Americans experience due to rural reliance on transportation, for example.
  • The components of the CPI, such as food and energy, are weighted. The price of food and beverages comprises 14.792% of the CPI while medical care is weighted 6.627%. These percentages might not reflect any individual’s spending patterns.
  • The sample ages differently than any individual. Forgetting the concept of emotional age, individuals age linearly. Each year you will be one year older than the last. The change in your income, for the most part, increases with your age. The age of a population sample does not progress in a straight line. For example, baby booms can skew the average age downward from one year to the next, when those babies are old enough to become part of the sample.
  • Personal desires become needs. Over time, the middle class has become better off. It was once a luxury to own a television sets; now households often own two or three high-definition TVs and several computers. The standard of living has increased and what it means to “get by” has changed. This is an overall observation, but it might apply to you without being reflected in the CPI.

These limitations make it difficult for you to calculate your real return. Convention calls for subtracting the inflation rate from your investment return to determine your “real” rate of return. That may be fine for comparing your performance with other possible investments, but it doesn’t provide a true understanding of how your purchasing power has changed. Your purchasing power depends entirely on what you purchase.

Look at your real expenses. This is easy to do if you track your spending. How much do your expenses change from one year to the next? Your personal rate of inflation may be much higher than the CPI for a number of reasons:

  • You have more money to spend.
  • Your tastes change and you want better quality products.
  • You were hit with major one-time expenses.
  • Your children are getting older.

While you may be getting more for your money in some areas, you’re not in others. Food prices may increase, but if you have three mouths to feed this year when a year ago you had only two, the effect of the price increase will hit harder. If your company moves to a new location twice as far from your home as last year, the increase of the price of fuel is more damaging to your finances than the CPI would indicate. While your $2,000 computer today will be more powerful than a $2,000 computer last year, it still serves the same functions.

Silent inflation — the increase of the cost of your particular mix of expenses and the change in your spending behavior — is what is destroying your net worth. There’s no investment that sufficiently fights this type of inflation. There are two proven strategies:

  1. Spend less money. Consciously controlling your expenses and cutting back on certain expenditures can reverse the effect of your personal inflation. Obviously not a popular approach except among the terminally frugal, almost everyone can find ways to shave the top off their expenses. David Bach, who created the Latte Factor, talked with Consumerism Commentary about options for individuals who already cut their expenses as much as possible but still wanted to save their finances.
  2. Earn more money. You can only cut your expenses to a point — the point at which you are spending only on necessities for life. Once you reach that point, earning more is the only option. Even when you have more to cut, you can benefit from earning more. Although a penny earned is not worth as much after tax as a penny saved, the possibilities for increasing income are limited only by your time and your willingness to learn new skills and take on new projects.

Often, people suggest investing in assets that produce revenue, like rental properties, as a way to put yourself on the better side of inflation. Aside from the risk involved with any type of investment, the benefit might not be so great. If you can increase the rent with the increase in the CPI, for example, you will increase revenue to the landlord, but the landlord’s expenses will also increase. Raising rents may not be pure profit.

Calculate your personal rate of inflation by comparing expenses from the past 12 months to your expenses from the 12 months prior. Did the expenses increase? If so, are you living better off than you were in the previous year or does the increase not reflect any substantial changes in your lifestyle?

Bureau of Labor Statistics

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Today’s guest on the Consumerism Commentary Podcast is David Bach, author of Debt Free For Life: The Finish Rich Plan for Financial Freedom, the latest in the Finish Rich series of books and online tools. David, Flexo and Bryan discuss financial changes in the last year, the national trend toward paying down debt, the Done of Last Payment (DOLP) program and Equifax DebtWise™.

Listen to the podcast or read the transcript for a description of DebtWise™. The service carries a monthly fee of $14.95, but is free for the first month if you follow this link.

Get Equifax DebtWise Now!

Consumerism Commentary Podcast #93
Debt Free for Life, David Bach: S04E15 / 116

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Table of contents

[00:00] Introduction from Bryan J Busch
[00:38] Interview with David Bach
[00:56] Success stories from 2010
[02:23] Good debt vs. bad debt
[03:45] Which debts are worthwhile risks?
[05:54] The new crisis of student loan debt
[06:31] Subsidizing school and exorbitant tuition
[09:20] Buying an expensive home just to get the tax deduction
[10:54] Searching for blame and deciding to take action
[15:14] DOLP and personal stories
[18:57] Equifax DebtWise™
[24:03] Reducing credit card interest rates
[26:20] Bankruptcy options and pitfalls
[29:16] Credit counseling options
[32:32] Looking ahead to 2011
[34:18] End

We always welcome feedback from listeners. If you have any comments for this episode or for any other, or if you have suggestions for future episodes, please leave us comments here or email us at podcast at this domain name.

Theme music by Mindcube.

Full transcript

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This was a fantastic year for Consumerism Commentary. Readership has grown by 10% since 2009, and I’m happy with these results considering the website has been around since 2003. There are many readers who were with Consumerism Commentary since its start — thank you! And for those who may be new to Consumerism Commentary, welcome. I hope we continue to have something to offer anyway. I’m always open to suggestions, so contact us if you have something to share.

Some of my best ideas come from readers, so if you have a personal experience to share, let me know.

Here are a few articles I’ve selected to represent Consumerism Commentary’s best in 2010.

Best of Consumerism Commentary, 2010

Thanks to all the guests who appeared on the Consumerism Commentary Podcast in 2010. Some of my favorites were Manisha Thakor, Get Financially Naked, David Bach, Start Over, Get Rich, J.D. Roth, Your Money the Missing Manual, frugal photography, Donna Freedman, microsaving, Ramit Sethi, earning more money, Zac Bissonnette, Debt-Free U, Kimberly Palmer, Generation Earn, and Farnoosh Torabi, Psych Yourself Rich.

Join the community

This coming year, Consumerism Commentary will be introducing new ways to interact with our community of readers. More announcements will follow in the coming weeks and months. Here is how you can stay involved with Consumerism Commentary today.

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When I started Consumerism Commentary in 2003, after about eight years of writing on the internet in a smaller, more personal capacity, I only had two goals: to track my finances while working to improve my money situation and to learn more about personal finance by finding articles, sharing links, and adding occasional thoughts of my own. Over a year later, I added advertising to Consumerism Commentary, and within another year, the website became more than just a way for me to track my financial improvement, it became an essential part of that progression.

For the last three or so years, I’ve been earning more from Consumerism Commentary than I have been from my day job. At times it has been significantly more, expressible in multiples — enough for me to consider leaving my career behind and write for the website and tend to other related business on a full-time basis. I’ve ultimately decided to make this jump, and now it’s only a matter of timing.

Claude Monet Bridge Over a Pond of Water LiliesThroughout this time, I’ve been receiving request after request to write more about the income I receive outside of my day job. I’ve been reluctant to write about earning money from blogging. My primary reason for this reluctance is that the concept of blogging is not directly related to the concept of personal finance. Although the topics on Consumerism Commentary occasionally stretch away from pure personal finance, I want to remain focused.

Asking me to write more about blogging would be similar to asking David Bach to offer his opinions about the process of writing a bestselling series of books rather than about the content within those books. (I don’t mean to imply any similarity or equivalence between myself and David Bach.) An even better illustration would be asking Claude Monet to paint his impression of how he paints a scene rather than his impression of a bridge over a pond of water lilies. It’s too “meta,” an added level of abstraction between something that exists and its representation.

I also don’t want to write about earning money for blogging because I’d prefer not to draw attention to my success. Of course, that is antithetical to most people’s suggestions for broadening a “personal brand.” I think it should be obvious that at this point I have little desire to be a renowned expert. No one in the “real world” has any interest in taking advice from someone who calls himself Flexo, a name chosen in about five seconds when there were no expectations for growth. “Personal branding” is furthest from my intentions.

Despite this, I reluctantly admit that earning money from blogging, just like earning money from a career or saving money on non-discretionary expenses, is a legitimate aspect of personal finance. I shouldn’t shy away from writing about the process of blogging.

So here is what I have learned from almost seven years at Consumerism Commentary, and at a lesser extent, from fifteen years writing for the web and almost twenty years building online communities including a popular modem-based bulletin board system in the early 1990s. (I’ll be thirty-four next month; it’s up to you whether you want to consider my teenage years managing a BBS as experience, but it is surprisingly similar to what I do today.)

Consider some of these points before starting a blog to earn money.

1. Increase success by writing about your passions

Which comes first, the topic or the passion? Much of the “earn money by blogging” advice I’ve seen suggests would-be internet moguls should start their business by determining which topic generates the most income overall and creating content within that topic. Unfortunately, that leads to a lot of people writing about personal finance, a lucrative topic thanks to a proliferation of deep-pocketed advertisers in the financial industry. Even broader than the topic of personal finance, it also results in proliferation of less-than-inspiring content, more noise making it difficult to discover the signal.

I don’t see this as a path to long-term success. It leads to frustration when the dollars don’t appear quickly or don’t appear at all. The only path that seems to work well is to start writing only if you have a passion for a certain topic and only if you are willing to dedicate time and effort into creating content at the highest level you can. You don’t choose the topic, the topic chooses you.

2. If you write with dollar signs in your eyes, don’t bother

It’s true that financial success is expedited by focusing on the business aspects of your endeavor, and I often hear from people who believe that if an untalented writer like myself can earn a living by writing on Consumerism Commentary, anyone can. However, most people will not earn a living from blogging-related income.

Many dollar-chasers start writing about the lucrative topic of personal finance without either a passion or interest in the subject. I read perhaps thousands of articles each week and it is crystal clear to me when a blogger is inspired by the topic and when a blogger is inspired by potential income.

Here is what I think about when evaluating whether a blogger is motivated primarily by potential income:

  • Is the writer more interested in quality or quantity? Quantity is necessary in order to get noticed by search engines, but quality provides a better experience for the reader. Attaining both would be a good goal; I try to find a balance while other successful bloggers take obsession over quality to an extreme and try to “save the world” with every article.
  • Are the articles written for the benefit of the reader, the blogger, or the advertiser? I give exceptional writers free passes to throw in a post for affiliate income if the overall tone of the blog does not involve shilling for companies. If every article borders on advertisement, my impression is the blogger is writing solely for money.
  • Does the blogger bother removing spam comments or spam links within comments? A website operator who can’t be bothered to filter noise from comments is not interested in creating a user-friendly experience. Many times I’ve stopped myself from linking to an otherwise excellent article that’s full of spam links at the bottom of the comments section.
  • Is there any personality within the articles or does the blog read like it could appear in a textbook? When I was looking to add writers to the Consumerism Commentary staff, I found that those who considered themselves “freelance writers” had a more difficult time bringing something personal to the tone. I like to know that there is a human being behind the words.

It is good that talented experts and dedicated amateurs are able to earn compensation for producing quality content and for making it available to the internet-browsing and searching public. But as the popularity of earning money through blogging has increased, so have the bloggers who are interested more in fattening their bank accounts than they are in adding something valuable to the world.

3. Have a mission statement or at least a mission

Original layout, Consumerism CommentaryConsumerism Commentary began without any income-related goals. Its purpose was to keep myself accountable for my finances and to help me learn more about money. That was, and is, the mission of this website. It sounds somewhat selfish on the surface; Consumerism Commentary is mostly for my own benefit, not for the readers.

This approach is, however, less self-focused than it sounds. The opposite approach would be to write a blog under the assumption that the author has all the answers and with the purpose of teaching others, ignoring the possibility that the author has more to learn. This is self-fashioned or self-proclaimed expertise, and I find it unappealing.

4. Earning money takes time

I don’t know exactly when Google created AdSense, but I do know it was not available when I started Consumerism Commentary. Very few blogs at that time earned money. I added the first AdSense advertisement to the website in November 2004, about sixteen months after my first post here. It was more of an experiment than anything else, and I had no expectations for income.

My cumulative earnings didn’t reach $100, the threshold for receiving the first check from Google, until April 2005. That is six months after the first ad appeared on the website, almost a year after Consumerism Commentary began, ten years after I had been writing for the web, and fourteen years after I started creating online communities.

I was lucky that there weren’t many, if any, other blogs discussing personal finance when I started Consumerism Commentary. There are thousands now, so it is more difficult to stand out in this particular niche. The same is true for the wider web, as well.

But great talent will always rise to the top. J.D. Roth is one of my favorite examples. He started writing on Get Rich Slowly in April 2006 and is one of the finest writers among those focusing on personal finance. Although there were over a thousand personal finance blogs when he started, he quickly rose to the top of the list. J.D. had been writing a personal blog since at least 2001, and that experience should not be ignored when looking at his path to success.

It is almost five years after I received that first AdSense check. Now there are more bloggers competing for advertisers, and putting the recession aside, more advertising dollars to go around. So I believe it is still realistic to expect income to come in slowly during the first year. If waiting six months for the first $100 seems like too much work for too little return, you may want to consider a different business venture.

5. Success takes more than just writing

I am reminded of why I’m perhaps not as successful as I could be. Over the past few years, I’ve been working harder at writing and managing this and several other websites. Unfortunately, I’ve put aside important aspects of building a successful website and community, such as participating on similar websites. As I mentioned above I read thousands of articles each week. About 70 percent of these articles are on “mainstream” websites or major media blogs and 30 percent are on amateur or independent blogs.

With more time, I would be able to participate in discussions and social networking media more. This participation in the larger community will assist with increasing the chance for success with a blog.

So is earning money through blogging unrealistic?

There is significant potential for earning money, possibly even earning a living, through blogging. For many people, especially those who are not passionate and dedicated, financial success will be elusive. My intent is not to discourage but to help manage expectations.

It’s great that free and widely available tools on the internet can help anyone can have a voice. You need to strive for excellence in order to stand out both to readers and to advertisers. It’s not enough to write occasional uninspired articles, put up a few ads, and wait for the money to roll in.

Readers can expect at least one more article on Consumerism Commentary about the specific ways I earn money from blogging with suggestions helpful to those who are writing about their passion and are ready to form a strategy for building diversified, self-sufficient income.

Because I was writing for new audiences, my recent ten-day tour forced me to write better articles than I normally write for Consumerism Commentary. This experience, in addition to my decision to put thoughts together for this article on earning money through blogging, helped me realize that I need to focus on improving my writing skills and find time for more participation within the community.

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Podcast 40: Getting Back on Track in 2010, David Bach

by Flexo

Today’s guest on the Consumerism Commentary Podcast is David Bach, author of Start Over, Finish Rich: 10 Steps to Get You Back on Track in 2010, a book in which David discusses getting out of debt in 2010 and how to make the most of the recovering economy. David is a former senior vice president ... Continue reading this article…

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Consumerism Commentary Podcast

by Flexo

The Consumerism Commentary Podcast is a weekly personal finance show, hosted by both Tom Dziubek, a former podcaster with the Wall Street Journal, and Bryan J Busch, who started his first podcast in 2005 for fans of novelty rock music. Each week, the show offers commentary about money management, getting out of debt, budgeting, consumer ... Continue reading this article…

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This Month in the Archives: Life Without Debt, Better Sex, and Bank Robbers

by Flexo

If you’re new to Consumerism Commentary, these articles from the archives will be new to you. From the Second Half of February 2007 The Case Against a Life Without Debt Tips for Purchasing a Musical Instrument for the Non-Professional How Much Do You Pay in Taxes? Survey Says: More Money Leads to Better Sex Advice ... Continue reading this article…

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This Month in the Archives: Mean People, Quicken Hack, and Marital Bliss

by Flexo

Welcome readers from Yahoo, CBS 8 San Diego, Consumerist, and various message forums from around the internet. Please take a moment a subscribe to the Consumerism Commentary RSS feed. If you’re new here, perhaps you’d like to take a look at articles from Februaries past. From the First Half of February 2007 Americans Aren’t Saving, ... Continue reading this article…

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