
© Imagen ilustrativa/Amr Dalsh / Reuters
You can take this to the bank: Americans are messed up about money.
A slew of new surveys and data have come out revealing that we don't save enough, we spend money we don't have, we have our financial priorities backwards — and more. Here are five new stats that prove Americans are backwards about money.
1. About 1 in 4 literally have no emergency savings. A survey released Tuesday by
Bankrate.com found that 24% don't have even a single dollar saved for an emergency. And that's just one of many surveys showing how little we have saved: A survey released in January
by Bankrate found that
nearly 60% of Americans wouldn't have enough savings to pay for a $500 expense if it came up unexpectedly. What's more, more than one in five say they'd slap down their credit card to pay that expense and more than one in would mooch off family to get the cash. Experts recommend that Americans have a least three to six months of income in the bank to pay for unexpected emergencies.
2. We are more worried about paying for our next vacation than about saving enough for retirement. That's the finding of a study released this week
by COUNTRY Financial, in which Americans report being more concerned about affording that vacation (36%) than having adequate retirement savings (32%). That may explain, in part, why
more than half of Americans will be broke when we retire,
according to a survey from GoBankingRates.com.
3. Millions of us hide money from our spouses and partners. An estimated 12 million Americans confess they have kept a source of money secret from their romantic partners,
according to CreditCards.com. That's typically not smart, experts say: "Any time you get into these kinds of things where you are operating behind the scenes, it usually comes out at some point," Corey Allan, a marriage and family therapist told Credit Cards.com. "We can't keep things hidden, especially in today's technological world. Any spouse who has any kind of suspicion can become a detective and find it."
4. We prioritize paying the wrong bills first. When we can't pay all our bills, we make bad choices about which to pay. "Consumers in financial distress tend to prioritize unsecured personal loans ahead of other credit products such as auto loans, mortgages and credit cards," according to a study of roughly two million consumers who had all four types of debt out this week from credit monitoring service TransUnion.
But experts say that's a backwards way to handle these bills.5. We've racked up $1 trillion in credit card debt — and that's just a fraction of what we owe. That's according to data released this year from the Federal Reserve, which found that U.S. consumers owe $1.0004 trillion on their cards, up 6.2% from a year ago; this is the highest amount owed since January 2009. What's more, this isn't the only consumer debt to top $1 trillion. We now also owe more than $1 trillion for our cars, and for our student loans, the data showed.
A company I worked for negotiated a long-term insurance program based on accumulated sick days with the enticement being at retirement an employee would be paid half of the accumulated sick days, up to half of 90 days would be paid for those in management, half of 130 accumulated days paid to hourly workers. The company was sold, and the payout for that union negotiated "benefit" disappeared at the whim of someone in the new management. So the smart people were the ones who took their time off, not caring about the future. The responsible people got cheated out of a considerable amount of money.
More than a few people have been cheated out of what was going to be their retirement money when the financial parasites crashed the economy in 2008. And the thieves were highly rewarded for it.
...and then there's a matter of healthcare and insurance...