Quote:
Originally Posted by piemaker720
No, on credit cards you pay interest on the balance you owe each month, so you are paying more money for items. On a layaway you are not paying interest, you make a payment and you can see exactly what you owe each time. As for the can, if people would admit it, if you had a can and was putting $5.00 a week in for something special. If something came up you would not be tempted to use the money, if your child came in and needed money for something you would not use the can money thinking I'll put it back later. Now for savings account, I have figured this for everyone to see.
Capital One Savings 5.00% ? <-> $100 min
ING Direct Savings 4.50% QFX OFX $25 bonus for new accts with $250 deposit
CitiBank eSavings Savings 4.75% ? ? Requires CitiBank EZ-Checking account
which may charge fees
HSBC Direct Savings 5.05% QFX OFX New money promotion: 6.0%
Regular Passbook Savings: An interest bearing savings account available to anyone. Interest is added to the account quarterly.
$10.00 a week for 3 months equals $120.00 that's 1 quarter
5% interest on $120.00 a quarter equals $6.00
That is if they pay 5%, some pay less than that.
|
But Pie, that is $6.00 you wouldn't have had before!!! How much do you typically spend on Christmas on say two kids? Say $1000.00. You could take the $1000 divide it by 42. The 42 weeks would be from Jan to mid November. You'd have your money saved by the time of Thanksgiving so you could shop the day after Thanksgiving sales. If you saved $25 a week which is skipping one meal a week of eating out, you would have saved $1090 plus the interest. If you put it in the bank savings account and consider it untouchable, then there is no problem. It's all about making choices which benefit you best.