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The concept of the Latte Factor is one of the most divisive issues in personal finance. Money gurus get so worked up over whether the Latte Factor is a valuable lesson in money management that one might think the issue were as important as war, the national debt, or capital punishment. Most of the time, passionate responses pertaining the the Latte Factor is based more on book sales and pageviews than any rational consideration of the issue.

The Latte Factor, a term coined and trademarked by financial author and guru David Bach, posits that small, repeated savings, of which people can make habits, can aid the growth of wealth over time. The math bears this out to be true: Assume you spend five dollars every weekday on a fancy coffee-related drink on the way to your office. If you cut out the coffee or replace it with a $1.50 less-fancy drink, you save at least $20 a week or maybe a $1,000 a year. Put that money in a bank or invest it, and assume you can earn a return from interest, dividends, or investment gains, and over the next ten years you’ll have $11,000 to $16,000 more to your name than you would have, had you continued buying your daily gourmet drink.

Latte Factor CoffeeThis concept isn’t limited to expensive coffee-related drinks. Any habits that result in spending money that could be deemed unnecessary can qualify for elimination due to the Latte Factor. Cook your own food rather than dine out once a week, and you could save just as much money or more over the same period.

Most people, however, don’t bridge the gulf between reducing spending in one area and increasing savings with the difference. Unless there’s a concerted, conscious effort to transfer money from a checking account to a savings account or an investment, the money formerly spent on lattes or other repeatable expense will just be spent on something else.

Furthermore, families that have already reduced their spending due to tough economic conditions that have become personally relevant may not have much room left to scrape the barrel to find additional savings.

Yet another criticism of the Latte Factor is that it minimizes the importance of reducing large expenses. If a family gets into the habit of saving money ordinarily spent on lattes and uses that attitude to justify buying a more expensive car, all the work will have been for nothing.

Well — the work would have been for a more expensive car. All spending is a choice. It’s easy to remember this when a friend refuses to spend time with you, citing the expense of the activity, while they continue to purchase unnecessary electronics equipment, for example. You can identify someone’s priorities by looking at how they choose to spend the money they have and the time they have available. If you look at your own priorities, your budget should match.

Whether you realize it or not, you’re broadcasting your priorities to the world, but mostly to yourself, by spending money and time in one area of your life at the expense of another area. If there’s incongruence between the priorities you think you should have and how you spend your time and money, consider changing something or accepting the idea that your priorities may not be what you expect. Your real priorities are evidenced by how you spend your limited resources.

If the pick-me-up and self-esteem you receive by drinking a latte in the morning is important to you, and you realize your habit results in a hypothetical “loss” of $10,000 or more over the course of ten years, spend the money. Buying a practical car that requires little care, uses fuel efficiently, and will last a long time can save money over the course of several decades, but if buying a less practical car makes you feel happy and won’t be a financial hardship, even if it means leasing a new car every three years, then go ahead. Your spending reflects your priorities.

I see this in my own spending. I still drive my old Honda Civic. In one respect, I haven’t purchased a new car because I see it as an unnecessary expense and I’m comfortable with keeping the money I would need to buy a new car in my savings account. Meanwhile, I spend money on things other people would see as frivolous, such as photography classes and equipment, hiring a maid service for my apartment on a bi-weekly schedule, coin collecting (though not much recently), and travel.

Is the Latte Factor relevant to your personal finance experience? What does your spending say about your priorities? Relevant responses to this article are worth twice as many points as usual. If you are a registered Consumerism Commentary visitor, you can earn points by participating in discussions to redeem for Amazon.com gift cards.

Photo: RaeAllen

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Unless Congress acts soon, student loans subsidized by the government will become significantly more expensive. Mandated interest rates on subsidized student loans will jump from 3.4% to 6.8% for the 2012-2013 school year. With unemployment still high for recent graduates, increased interest rates will add to the debt burden. Tuition costs are still increasing as is the cost of living.

Without a job or in other economic hardship, an individual with student loan debt can defer payments. Student loan deferment delays the debt without increasing the amount of interest owed on the loan.

College studentsThe availability of easy credit for education has certainly helped a larger segment of society obtain an undergraduate degree, but it has also encouraged institutions to raise prices. Knowing that the market can continue to bear significant increases in tuition, there is no end in sight for these climbing fees.

Going into debt to receive a college education and degree has become the norm. It is possible, however, to go to college without getting into debt. Author and University of Massachusetts alumnus Zac Bissonnette has explored this idea, as we’ve discussed on an earlier podcast.

Cancelling the planned student loan interest rate increase, scheduled to go into effect on July 1, has a cost to taxpayers. The public is subsidizing these loans — so the financial institutions that offer the loans to students can continue to profit while students are in school. According to lawmakers, this subsidy at the low interest rate costs the government $6 billion a year.

Both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney support extending the lower interest rate, with the Democrats saying they could pay to extend the lower interest rate by changing the tax code to require small business owners who file their taxes for a business entity classified as an S Corporation to pay self-employment taxes on the full business income.

Thanks to the availability of student loans and the G.I. Bill, college education is attainable for everyone who wants it. But as the percentage of college graduates within the American population has increased, the ability to use that degree to differentiate oneself in a competitive employment marketplace has diminished.

Meanwhile, the cost to attain that degree has continued to increase with no end in sight. Some might argue the quality of that degree in general has decreased as well, and question whether a degree is worth the investment of time and money. The perceived reduction of value draws students and their influential parents to better-branded institutions; if the degree itself can’t differentiate someone from a crowd, perhaps a degree branded with Harvard or Yale will set the student apart.

Extending the low interest rates will keep a college education more affordable for families who need financial aid and will emphasize the idea that a college education is important for every individual who wants the sociological and financial advantages that the degree might provide. It won’t solve the problem of ever-increasing costs to attend college.

Photo: Pink Sherbet Photography
CNN, New York Times

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I mentioned a few months ago with my year-end balance sheet that I would soon be changing the way I report my finances publicly. These monthly reports have been a relatively consistent part of Consumerism Commentary since I founded this website in July 2003. One of the original purposes of this website was to help myself take control of my finances and learn more about managing my own money.

After a while, though, the net worth reports, which include not much more than an accounting of my bank account and credit card balances, became less meaningful. At the same time, I stopped myself from reporting my income figures due to the complexities with dealing with a private transaction. I’ve decided to turn back to basics with the monthly reporting in order to focus once again on reducing my expenses.

The report below includes the last six months of my expenses after taxes and not including a few items like charitable contributions and business expenses. It will provide a good baseline for moving forward and determining where I can reduce my expenses and where I can compromise and allow myself more leeway. I’ve already done a good job of eliminating unnecessary expenses in order for me to enjoy certain things without stretching my budget, so reducing expenses might not be as important right now as monitoring my spending to ensure I’m not being wasteful. Continue reading to see my expenses.

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When I write about the unbanked, the vast majority of this category of consumer avoids the financial industry due to lack of trust in the industry or a belief that living paycheck to paycheck doesn’t necessitate the fees and hassles of including a third party in financial transactions. Cash, in some respects, keeps you off the map. Also, it’s more likely that those avoiding the mainstream financial industry and opting for alternative financial products like payday loans and check cashing services live within lower socio-economic status communities.

That isn’t always the case, though. Here’s an interesting question I received from a reader:

I read your article on how to buy a house with cash. I will be in that situation in another year or two, moving out of state. But my question is, how do you buy a house using actual cash money and not checks or wire transfers? All the cash was obtained legally, but if I deposit it all at the same time into a financial institution, then write a check at closing, would that not sound all kinds of bells and whistles at the bank and IRS?

I understand that any transaction of ten thousand dollars or more and the bank is obligated to contact the IRS. I’ve already paid tax on this money and don’t want or need the IRS hounding me. So, what are your thoughts and ideas?

CashThis is an interesting question. Usually, when people talk about buying a car or a house with cash — I bought my car with cash — they’re usually referring to paying by check or bank transfer. Carrying thousands, tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands of dollars in bills is not only inconvenient, it’s risky. If you lose your checkbook, you can cancel your checks. If you lose a briefcase full of cash, good luck.

But before we get to the logistics of paying for a house with cold, hard cash, it might be good to address the reader’s assumptions.

Banks are required to report some transactions to the government. Transactions over $10,000 — or multiple smaller transactions that add up to over $10,000, or a transaction for $9,999 when you change your deposit amount when the teller mentions your transactions over $10,000 will be reported — are reported on a Currency Transaction Report and filed with the IRS. Another form is required if the money travels into or out of the United States, to or from a foreign country. If the bank has some reason to believe the transaction is related to something illegal, they would need to file a Suspicious Activity Report for the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), a division of the Treasury Department.

You can download the Currency Transaction Report here, directly from the FinCEN. I am neither a lawyer nor a tax expert, but depositing a large amount of cash for later withdrawal is not an uncommon practice at banks. If you’re not trying to hide anything from the IRS, if you’re not doing anything else illegal, if you don’t have a suspicious appearance, and if the teller doesn’t have any reason to think you’re trying to hide something, you shouldn’t have any problems.

I believe that process is much easier than showing up to a house contract closing with a briefcase or sack full of cash. In my opinion, that’s more suspicious than showing up at a bank for a large deposit. This would require everyone to count the money, bill by bill, at least twice.

Seeking some advice from a professional, I asked Barbara Friedberg for her thoughts on the matter. Barb has been working in the real estate industry for decades, and is currently the chief financial officer and portfolio manager of a real estate holding company. She also finds the time to be the writer behind Barbara Friedberg Personal Finance. Bringing her experience with real estate deals to Consumerism Commentary, here is what Barb suggests:

Yikes, a suitcase full of cash, I assume you mean “real money.” The reader needs to deposit the cash in a bank. Then she needs to check with the bank to find out how long they need to hold it before she can withdraw it. At the real estate closing she needs to bring a cashiers check or arrange with the bank for a wire transfer. I suppose bringing cash to a closing is possible, but… I checked with my real estate experts, and my own experience suggests that this is infrequent at best and at worst, quite dangerous.

There is the problem of malfeasance on several fronts without using the security of a cashier’s check or wire transfer. The realtors and closing agents are given free reign with tens of thousands of dollars. Your proof of ever paying the cash is limited to a flimsy receipt.

My advice, deposit the cash, and schedule the closing for a date when the reader is certain she can have full access to the cash.

It sounds like bringing cash to a real estate closing is a bad idea.

I’d love for more Consumerism Commentary readers to weigh in. If you’ve worked as a bank teller, how did you handle large cash deposits? If you’ve been involved with real estate transactions, has any party ever brought a bag full of cash to the closing?

JMR_Photography

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Kodak Files for Bankruptcy

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Kodak Portra

There were rumors and predictions for a while, but today it’s official. Kodak, the company that revolutionized film photography and adopted digital photography early, has declared bankruptcy. The company has been struggling since the 1980s; I’m surprised it survived this long without filing Chapter 11. That’s what the company chose to do today, with debt ... Continue reading this article…

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How to Solve the Financial Literacy Problem

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Kid with money

Many Americans experience financial jeopardy at some point in their lives, and experts share an opinion about a strong cause: there’s no formalized way to learn how to use money properly, so most people must learn by experience, making mistakes as they learn what is necessary for building a solid financial foundation. It would save ... Continue reading this article…

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The Worst Celebrity Tax Problems

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It’s with a tinge of schadenfreude that people are fascinated with the failures and foibles of famous celebrities. Every year, the IRS chases people who evade or underpay federal income tax, and actors and popular figures in the media, who often don’t manage their own finances, make the news. The latest is Lindsay Lohan. You ... Continue reading this article…

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12 Alternative Financial Resolutions for 2012

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New year hat

New Year’s resolutions have become so cliché that the process of making them has become a joke. People settle for mundane goals for the year like “losing weight,” “quitting smoking,” and “getting out of debt.” These are great goals, of course, but most who think about these only when the calendar changes soon forget their ... Continue reading this article…

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