My wife and I have worked really hard on saving/debt reduction/retirement fund, but we often disagree on things. I want to tighten up more, she wants a slight relaxation in our spending.
While her spending habits have greatly improved, she has turned into a "spend money to save money" or "its a good deal honey" shopper, whereas I say if we do not need it at the time we save more money by not buying it.
Example is cereal. We keep anywhere from 10-20 boxes on hand, yet if there is a deal at the store she cannot pass it up. I say we have plenty and that cereal deals are pretty common here, so lets not buy this week, but I generally lose (its not so much money that its worth arguing over, but these little things add up).
Kids clothes are another. She just bought a bunch of stuff for the boy we are expecting in March. Some of it is seasonal, and we live in a four seasons climate. I have concerns the coat may not fit next winter (who knows how slow/fast a kid will grow?). But, it was a "great deal." (which is true, it was priced very nice).
Also, we each have a set amount of spending money every month. I try to set an example by proudly saying that I only used 50% this month and applied the rest towards a debt or savings, but she always uses hers up. I do not mind too much (she stays within her allowance almost every time), but its another small example of the differences.
Do I press for tighter spending, or do I just deal with it as long the current habits do not start to slide to more spending? I think the frustration on my part mostly stems from our conversations: one day we talk about savings and retirement goals and she shares my thoughts, yet the next its spend a couple of bucks here, $10 there on things we may not need at the time.
While her spending habits have greatly improved, she has turned into a "spend money to save money" or "its a good deal honey" shopper, whereas I say if we do not need it at the time we save more money by not buying it.
Example is cereal. We keep anywhere from 10-20 boxes on hand, yet if there is a deal at the store she cannot pass it up. I say we have plenty and that cereal deals are pretty common here, so lets not buy this week, but I generally lose (its not so much money that its worth arguing over, but these little things add up).
Kids clothes are another. She just bought a bunch of stuff for the boy we are expecting in March. Some of it is seasonal, and we live in a four seasons climate. I have concerns the coat may not fit next winter (who knows how slow/fast a kid will grow?). But, it was a "great deal." (which is true, it was priced very nice).
Also, we each have a set amount of spending money every month. I try to set an example by proudly saying that I only used 50% this month and applied the rest towards a debt or savings, but she always uses hers up. I do not mind too much (she stays within her allowance almost every time), but its another small example of the differences.
Do I press for tighter spending, or do I just deal with it as long the current habits do not start to slide to more spending? I think the frustration on my part mostly stems from our conversations: one day we talk about savings and retirement goals and she shares my thoughts, yet the next its spend a couple of bucks here, $10 there on things we may not need at the time.
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