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This is a guest article by Philip Taylor, the owner of the blog PT Money. Philip created PT Money to share his own experiences with successfully managing his money.

It’s no secret that our money and our health are connected. More people want to excel with these two things for their lives more than any other two things combined. Year after year, two of the most common New Year’s resolutions are to lose weight and save money. In fact, if you go to 43 Things right now, a website where over 3 million visitors share their goals, you’ll see that these are trending in the most popular resolutions section of their site. For many people, including myself, the path to happiness involves having a healthy body and a healthy financial life.

Money and health are also connected in their elusiveness. A few of us are lucky to be born with the ability to print money or with a superior metabolism, but the majority of us have to make a real effort to maintain good health and the proper financial situation. It doesn’t come easy. Let’s take a look some other ways that money and health are connected in our lives.

Hidden costs of poor health

When I left the corporate world earlier this year I had to get my own health insurance, unlike Flexo who chose COBRA coverage. I quickly discovered that my excess weight would cost me hundreds of dollars more each year in individual health insurance premiums than I would pay had I been in a more ideal weight range. I’m simply more of a risk to the insurance companies, so they need to charge me more for the increased risk. Life insurance premiums are handled in the same way. The more you weigh, the more you pay.

A recent study on the costs of being obese in America reported, “The overall, tangible, annual costs of being obese are $4,879 for an obese woman and $2,646 for an obese man. The overall annual costs of being overweight are $524 and $432 for women and men, respectively.”

The expenses adding to the costs included direct medical costs, absenteeism, and employer costs, as well as personal costs such as clothing, daily needs, gasoline, and others. The big difference between women and men is due to the connection between obesity and lower wages in women. Basically, obese women face much more wage discrimination.

Dining out “double-up”

Eating outside of my home has easily been the biggest culprit in my efforts to reduce unecessary spending in my monthly budget. It’s also been a big part of the reason I’m carrying around a few extra pounds. I believe that too much dining out will leave you fat and broke. The problem is that the portions at today’s restaurants are just too big. Most dinner plates I see easily contain two times the recommended caloric intake for a meal. Not only are you paying for the convenience of having someone prepare the meal for you, you are paying for more meal than you actually need.

One of my goals for 2011 is to eat more meals at home. These meals generally cost less and I can control the portions and calories (without resorting to doggie bags, as I do at most restaurants). Also, contrary to popular belief, meals at home take less of your time. Time is money.

The health benefits of wealth

While poor health choices seem to create a negative financial situation, there is also evidence that as your wealth increases, your health tends to improve. When your finances are in order, it will likely mean that you can afford to do several things to improve your health: afford a gym or trainer, eat more fresh fruits and vegetables, afford more preventative healthcare, eat better when you do eat outside of the home, and afford more vacation and recovery time. Improved finances aren’t a guarantee of health, but they definitely help.

Using money as a good health motivator

Because we desire both health and money, we can use one to help influence the other. My very frugal wife once told me that back in her early 20s she used to sign up for marathons and 5Ks well in advance of race day. Not only did she do this to pay a lower price for registering in advance, she liked how it put her on the hook financially. The last thing this girl on a teacher’s salary wanted to do was show up unprepared for the event and feel like she was wasting the money she had invested. So, more often than not, she showed up properly trained and ready for the race.

Another tactic is to make a bet with some friends regarding your health-improving efforts. The website stickK will help faciliate this financial wager around the goal of your choice. If your goal is to drop a few pounds or quit smoking, you’ll be putting your money at risk for the sake of your health. Sounds like a noble wager to me. One other resource you might want to check out is HealthyWage. It’s a site that will actually pay you or your team members to lose weight.

Inexpensive ways to get healthy

Finally, here are some ways for you to get healthy that won’t empty your wallet:

  1. Walking in your neighborhood, local mall or school gym. Walking is the easiest way for anyone to get started.
  2. Working out in your apartment or condo community center gym. I once trained for a half marathon on a treadmill.
  3. Renting exercise DVDs from the library or using your Netflix subscription. Everyone has time for a 20 minute free workout routine in front of the TV.
  4. Searching for used exercise equipment on craigslist. Dumbbells, resistance bands, jump ropes can all be found online for less than full price.
  5. Making your daily activities a workout. Park further away from your office, take the stairs, or actively play just 30 minutes longer with your kids.

What other connections do you see between money and health? How are you planning on improving both in the new year?

Editor’s note: This is a timely article! I’m working hard to reduce my waistline, one of the few numbers I have not been happy about an increase over the past ten years. I’m working on achieving a 5K but healthier eating is one of my goals, as well. Thank you, Phil, for sharing this article.

Photo: Pink Sherbet

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If you are seeking your own health insurance outside of an employer plan, your weight has a lot to do with the premium you’ll pay as well as your ability to even qualify for insurance. Insurance companies find this to be logical. Overweight individuals account for a higher percentage of health-related costs than they should, all other things being equal.

From the New York Times:

Heavy people do not spend more than normal-size people on food, but their life insurance premiums are two to four times as large. They can expect higher medical expenses, and they tend to make less money and accumulate less wealth in their shortened lifetimes. They can have a harder time being hired, and then a harder time winning plum assignments and promotions…

Complications from obesity, particularly diabetes, which afflicts 21 million Americans, push up the bill: $44,000 for a heart attack, $40,200 for a stroke or $37,000 for end-state kidney disease…

As the cost of group health care increases for corporations, many companies are looking for ways to cut costs. One way to do so is to encourage a healthier lifestyle among employees. In my company, there are a number of programs available to employees who are looking for ways to improve their health. Some companies, in addition to offering employee assistance programs, are beginning to set health insurance premiums, or the percentage of these premiums paid by the employee rather than the employer, by a measure of weight.

Forced to Be Fit: CBS Evening NewsThe body-mass index (BMI) is one such measure being used to determine how much an employee should pay for their portion of the company’s group insurance plan. The reasoning is simple: overweight individuals cost the company more in health insurance costs. But is this discrimination?

The CBS Evening News with Katie Couric will be running a feature on this issue tomorrow night. This week, the program will focus on obesity in America. The series is called “Forced to Be Fit;” segments to be aired Tuesday through Thursday will take a look at ways people in this country are being encouraged to lose the extra pounds, whether they want to be or not.

Extra Weight, Higher Costs [New York Times]

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Kiyosaki is a Liar?

This article was written by in Consumer. 34 comments.

Robert KiyosakiWonderful. After reading Ben Stein’s column, which I mentioned earlier today, I came across Robert Kiyosaki’s latest on Yahoo Finance, Lying is Easy, Wealth Takes Work.

Let’s just start right at the top: Read the full article →

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Happy BirthdayWelcome to the anniversary edition of the Carnival of Personal Finance! What a year it has been. The first Carnival of Personal Finance was posted on June 20, 2005. To celebrate the Carnival’s first birthday, I asked participants to submit two articles: a recent favorite as usual and one of their favorites from the past year.

Before we get started, if you’re new to Consumerism Commentary, please read more about me (Flexo) and this site or browse some of my favorite entries from 2005.

This week’s submissions are sorted by number of words in the entry, so before you spend time reading an article, you can get a relative idea of how much time the author spent putting the article together. There are many good articles here, especially within the authors’ “favorites.” Some of my favorites from this week’s submissions are highlighted in yellow.

By the way, I didn’t include the few submissions bordering on spam, affiliate links, etc. Here we go. Read the full article →

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