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  • Any information shared on Free Money Finance does not constitute financial advice. The Website is intended to provide general information only and does not attempt to give you advice that relates to your specific circumstances. You are advised to discuss your specific requirements with an independent financial adviser. All posts are © 2005-2009, Free Money Finance.

9 posts categorized "Money Stats"

August 02, 2008

Almost Anything Has Better Odds than Winning the Lottery

As if we need any more evidence that playing the lottery is a fool's game, check out these odds:

  • Odds of winning a single state lottery: 1 in 18 million
  • Odds of becoming president: 1 in 10,000,000
  • Odds of dying from parts falling off an airplane: 1 in 10,000,000
  • Odds of dying from contact with hot tap water: 1 in 5,005,564
  • Odds you’ll be killed by lightning: 1 in 2,650,000
  • Odds that you will die from the collision of an asteroid hitting the earth in the next one hundred years: 1 in 500,000
  • Odds of a child being in a fatal automobile accident: 1 in 23,000
  • Odds of dying in a car accident: 1 in 18,585
  • Odds of being murdered: 1 in 18,000
  • Odds of winning an Academy Award: 1 in 11,500
  • Odds you will be injured by a toilet this year: 1 in 10,000
  • Odds of dying on a bicycle: 1 in 4,472
  • Odds of writing a New York Times best seller: 1 in 220

So, are you worried that you'll be injured by a toilet this year? Have you stopped riding your bike because you think you'll die? Or have you stopped using hot tap water because you're afraid it will kill you?

On the positive side, do you plan on accepting an Academy Award this year? Is your best-seller written? Are you planning on beating Obama and McCain?

In other words, there are a whole host of things we aren't afraid of because the chances of them happening are so remote that it's likely they never will happen. And there are things we don't even dream about because the chances of them happening are so remote that it's likely they never will happen. And yet these things we ignore are much, much, much, much more likely to happen than any of us winning the lottery. (ok the president one is "only" about twice as likely, but the others are way more likely than winning the lottery.)

Just some perspective. Food for thought.

April 22, 2008

Purchasing Power and Inflation

The following is another guest post from Free Money Finance reader Rod Ferguson. Though not strictly a personal finance piece, I find this very interesting and hope you do as well.

Money. Money is a hard term to understand. Sometimes money means currency, sometimes it means purchasing power and sometimes it means store of wealth. But one thing money definitely is: it's whatever people think it is. This is true of gold or silver or big rocks or paper, the thing only has value if people think it does. Today, almost every nation uses “promissory notes” as money, called “fiat” currency (literally means “let it be done” – it’s money cause the government says so).  Gold has had the longest run as "money" in human history as it's somewhat rare and impossible to manufacture or duplicate. In discussions of the gold standard versus fiat, many people talk about gold as a store of wealth, and some talk about it as a currency, but few talk about it in terms of purchasing power. For example: one ounce of gold at the turn of the 20th century could buy a nice suit, a hat, a fine cigar, a good meal, a night of drinks at the tavern and still leave you with change in your pocket. Today, an ounce of gold can buy you a nice suit, a hat, a fine cigar, a good meal, a night of drinks at the club and still leave you with change in your pocket. The purchasing power of gold hasn't varied much in the last few thousand years. I wanted to talk about purchasing power and how inflation works against it, both with a gold standard (historically) and under our current fiat system.

A brief history of US currency

To understand what our currency is today, we must understand what it has been.  Presented here is a short history of currency in the US. Currency revaluations are included; many people do not know that the US has had several currencies, and the revaluations themselves show periods where economic breakdown was occurring.  The dates have been borrowed from a variety of sources, including the Federal Reserve:

  • 1775 - The first "United States" currency was issued - the Continental Currency (was fiat and used to pay for the Revolutionary War. Went inflationary so fast, we needed a loan from France to actually pay for the revolution towards the end of the war.)
     
  • 1785 - The US Dollar is established as the unit of currency for these United States, issued by individual banks (the end result of the Continentals inflation and eventual worthlessness was incorporated into the Constitution as Article 1, Section 10, "...coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts...")
     
  • 1861 - First Federally authorized currency created, the Greenback (used to finance the Civil War, has the distinction of still being redeemable at face value if you happen to find one in circulation.) Currency revaluation #1 (some contention here – bank notes were still in use, but Congress encouraged Greenback usage over bank note usage.)
     
  • 1913 - The progressive income tax is instituted as part of the Federal Reserve Act (originally stated as never more than 1 or 2% of yearly income, implemented to pay interest on loans from the Federal Reserve.)  This is significant because for the first time, we taxed citizens to pay for maintenance of the currency.
     
  • 1916 - The Federal Reserve (which is neither Federal nor has any reserve) opens its doors for business.
     
  • 1934 - Private ownership of gold made illegal (gold bullion and coins were taken and federal reserve notes issued instead with the indication that they represented gold in storage.)  Silver is still used as a money standard.  Currency revaluation #2.
  • 1944 - US Dollar established as global reserve currency at Bretton Woods, NH (the Bretton Woods Agreements).  Nations sent gold to the US in exchange for dollars and agreed to use dollars as the international exchange medium.
     
  • 1963 - Federal Reserve notes were issued with no indication they represented anything but were “legal tender for all debts public and private”, yet were still redeemable internationally for gold. Currency revaluation #3.
     
  • 1965 - The US removes the silver standard for domestic money.  Replaces silver money with a copper-sandwich thing that sort of looks like silver.
     
  • 1971 - Nixon closed the international gold window and floats the dollar with nothing backing it but the full faith and credit of the US government.

Now, the nature of our currency reflects the value of our currency. We had gold and silver in circulation in the past - which guaranteed value in a foreign land regardless of the exchange rate - but currently have base metal replicas that have little intrinsic value. The face value of our currency is the same; once, you could redeem your paper for gold, now it’s just paper.  The dangerous thing about the currency now is that because the dollar represents a unit of our net worth, those dollars can really only be used to buy resources of the US – businesses, land, raw materials, etc.  This process is known as “economic colonization.”

Inflation

I've put together a short chart of wage and price inflation throughout US history, with some bullets mentioning major events that affected money. It is important to understand the difference between wage and price inflation; while your salary may be increasing, if the prices of goods are increasing faster then your wages you will suffer the negative effects of inflation.  Please note that positive numbers denote inflation (increase) and negative numbers denote deflation (decrease).  Unfortunately, due to lack of records there isn't really any way to account for US inflation prior to 1800 so these figures only reflect inflation rates from 1800. (click image to enlarge)

Inflation_3 

Bear in mind that the wage rate is based on unskilled labor and the price rate is based on the official CPI. So, if you look at the years leading up to 1934, you have 700% wage inflation and 24% price deflation compounded. From 1934 to 1971, you have nearly 800% wage inflation with only 300% price inflation. But, from 1971 to 2006 you only have 480% wage inflation with a price inflation rate of over 500% - your purchasing power is being eroded away.

The Value Trap

Taking a different tack, let's look at some averages in 1934; the year we went off the gold standard domestically (please note that data for a like-for-like comparison of automobiles was unavailable, nor were there any average prices available prior to the mid 1970’s, so the comparisons are not exact – but representative). The numbers below reflect the actual amounts as well as the percent of annual wages (in parentheses) they make up:

  • Average wages per year $1,600.00
  • Average Cost of new house $5,970.00 (370%)
  • Average Cost of a gallon of Gas 10 cents (.006%)
  • Average Monthly Rent $20.00 per month (1.25%)
  • Studebaker Truck $625.00 (39%)

Now let's look at the same averages in 1971, the year we went off the gold standard internationally and attained a true fiat currency:

  • Average Income per year $10,600.00
  • Average Cost of new house $25,250.00 (238%)
  • Average Cost of a gallon of Gas 40 cents (.0037%)
  • Average Monthly Rent $150.00 per month (1.4%)
  • Datsun 1200 Sports Coupe $1,866.00 (17.6%)

Now lets look at some averages in 2006:

  • Average wages per year $44,472
  • Average Cost Of a new house $299,900 (673%)
  • Average Cost of a gallon of Gas $2.90 (.006%)
  • Average Monthly Rent $991.00 (2.2%)
  • Average Cost of a new car $24,400 (54.8%)

So, the "average American" didn't do too bad as far as their purchasing power is concerned once we went off the gold standard domestically. While inflation rose faster than before, wage inflation rose faster than price inflation. However, once we floated the currency completely, price inflation greatly exceeded wage inflation, especially for assets.

Per Capita GDP – the statistic nobody knows

Per capita GDP is simply the division of the total output of the US by the number of its citizens.  Per capita GDP is useful if you wish to determine purchasing power, although does not paint a complete picture when considering overall cost and quality of life. It is also useful to see disparities between “wealthy” and “poor” between different eras; technology makes an expensive luxury at one time a cheap necessity in another (i.e. – the telephone) so you have to look at the economy overall.  And, overall we're not looking good compared to less than a century ago - a person with national average salary of $1,858.00 in 1931 had the comparative wage of over $132,000 in today's dollars and the purchasing power of over $320,000. Not many people make over $130k per year nor have the economic influence of a third of a million dollars, yet $1,858.00 was the average. Today, the average is $44,765.00, which is the same as making $626.81 in 1931, with the purchasing power of $259.54.

What does this all mean?

When a currency has an asset backing it, only major events like a war or a national emergency causes price inflation, while wage inflation will naturally increase as goods are produced to collect more of the backing asset (which creates more "money") and technological advancements cause goods to be produced more cheaply. It's during incidents like a war that an asset backed currency is thought of as "inflexible" because it doesn't easily allow for borrowing from the future to pay for a critical situation today. When fiat currency is managed as if it has an asset backing (from 1934-1971), then fiat can function; the currency has more flexibility and can respond more readily to catastrophe or war. Once the currency isn't managed as if it has an asset backing, fiat tends to wobble and spiral out of control (1971-2006). Once the printing presses are on full time, pretty much everything is treated as an "emergency".  Fiat systems can work, but only for so long – this is a lesson that history has taught us that has no exception.

My Opinion

The Federal Reserve is supposed to use the net worth of the US as its yardstick for printing money – that’s all fine and good.  But, we seem to be getting caught into this inflationary spiral of “we can print more money which inflates the net worth so we can print more money which inflates the net worth so we can print more money” etc, ad nauseum and therein lies the trap.  Milton Friedman once said:

“Inflation is just like alcoholism. In both cases when you start drinking or when you start printing too much money, the good effects come first. The bad effects only come later...That's why in both cases there is a strong temptation to overdo it. To drink too much and to print too much money. When it comes to the cure, it's the other way around. When you stop drinking or when you stop printing money, the bad effects come first and the good effects only come later. That's why it's so hard to persist with the cure.“

There is a point where we stop merely inflating and run the risk of hyper-inflating.  Are we there now? No, I don’t think so.  Can we get there soon?  Yes, I believe we can.  Can it be avoided?  Yes, but only if we make some fundamental changes to our monetary policy starting now.  It is hard to protect yourself from inflation, but it’s easy to start minimizing the effects.  Pay off your debt, buy staples in bulk when you can and lower your standard of living as much as you are comfortable doing so.

Rod Ferguson was born in 1969 in Iowa City, Iowa.  His family moved around the country quite a bit so he became very used to change.  After graduating high school, he joined the Navy and married his beautiful wife Anne.  Choosing technology as his profession, he rode the dot-com boom up and slid right down with the market at the turn of the 21st century.  After this rather frustrating ride, he decided that by learning about finance, and then economics, he might avoid this ride in the future.  His studies began with the stock market, branched to global currencies and foreign economies, then delved into the history of the US economy and histories of foreign economies.  The more he read and researched, the more he realized that economics was one of the major driving forces in our history – that the rise and fall of nations has depended much more on the management of economies than on the management of armies.  Armed with this knowledge, changed his approach to managing his personal finances and began teaching others what he knew and how to apply it to their lives.  This is his first foray into publication and he hopes you enjoy and can gain value from his works.

August 16, 2007

Average American Summer Vacation Costs over $1,600

Here's a small stat I found at the bottom of a page in Money magazine's August issue:

Average amount Americans planned to spend on summer vacation (according to a Visa study): $1,654.

A few thoughts on this:

1. Since it says "summer vacation" I assume this is not total vacation spending for the year, but it's just for the summer time vacations Americans take.

2. This is way above what we spend on our average summer vacation. In fact, most years we spend $500 or so for the FULL YEAR -- most of it spent on gas driving to see family and friends.

3. That said, every ten years or so we have a "big" vacation (like our trip this year to Disney) and we go way over $500. Still, even with this averaged in, we're still at less than $1,000 a year over the past ten years.

What do you spend on your vacations? Do you just take them in the summer or are there other times you travel?

June 21, 2007

Facts About How People Handle Money

I recently ran into an old magazine article that lists several facts on how people handle money, quoting Dave Ramsey's The Total Money Makeover as the source. I found many of these interesting and wanted to share them with you:

  • 90% buy things they can't afford.
  • 80% of graduating college seniors have credit card debt.
  • 49% can't cover one month's living expenses if they lose their income.
  • 75% of airline miles "rewarded" are never redeemed.
  • Most people carry a car loan, paying $378 a month. That sum invested from 25 to 65 would yield $4 million at retirement.
  • 60% don't pay off their credit cards every month.
  • 80% mistakenly believe their standard of living will go up at retirement.
  • 19% of those filing for bankruptcy in 2002 were college students.

Here are my thoughts on these:

1. Not surprising. I thought back personally and I can't remember when the last time I was that I bought something I couldn't afford. Something I paid too much for or something I didn't need -- of course, those would be easy to name. But not something I couldn't afford.

2. College loan debt is ok by me as long as it's not so massive. Why? Because it will more than pay off in extra income in the long run. That said, credit card debt is not acceptable to me for anyone in any stage of life.

3. Yikes! So almost half the population is one month's salary away from financial meltdown?

4. All the more reason to go for a cash rewards card.

5. I save for a car and pay cash -- haven't had a car payment in 15 years.

6. See #4. I use my two credit cards quite regularly (most of the use is on my Blue Cash from American Express card), but pay them both off every month.

7. Ha! Yes, I think people are deluded when it comes to their expectations of retirement.

8. Wow, that's a shocker. I've never seen anything like this quoted before. Who would have guessed?

Overall, I thought this was some really compelling information -- much of it almost unbelievable even for a jaded guy like me.

June 14, 2007

Top Athletes Make a Boatload of Money

Sports Illustrated recently released its list of 50 top-earning American athletes and let's just say, they are all doing pretty well financially. here are the top 10 and the amounts they earned on and off (endorsements) the field:

1. Tiger Woods - $112 million
2. Oscar De La Hoya - $55 million
3. Phil Mickelson - $51 million
4. Shaquille O'Neal - $35 million
5. Kobe Bryant - $34 million
6. LeBron James - $31 million
7. Kevin Garnett - $29 million
8. Derek Jeter - $29 million
9. Alex Rodriguez - $28 million
10. Dale Earnhardt Jr. - $27 million

Wow.

A few interesting statistics from the overall list:

1. Endorsements are bigger than salaries. Of the top 10, 57% of the earnings are from endorsements driven by Tiger Woods (89%), Phil Mickelson (92%), LeBron James (81%) and Dale Earnhardt Jr. (74%).

2. The only woman in the top 50 is Michelle Wie. She's #22 with $20.2 million.

3. Super Bowl MVP Peyton Manning is the NFL's top earner on and off the field (#12, $23 million.)

4. Seems like it's better to be a top athlete where you're in an individual sport (golf) or one with a small number of players (basketball.) It means more money to keep for yourself versus, say, football where the money needs to be divided among many more players. Popularity of the sport helps a bit too, of course, but in the end, personality makes the biggest difference. If top athletes have a winning personality and image that can help sell products, they'll clean up royally.

The top earning non-American athletes aren't doing poorly either. Here are the top five:

1. Fernando Alonso - $35 million
2. Ronaldinho - $33 million
3. Roger Federer - $31 million
4. Valentino Rossi - $30 million
5. David Beckham - $30 million

Not bad for playing a sport and having fun, huh?

March 07, 2007

49% of People Don't Have an Emergency Fund

Here's one for the "yikes!" file from Money magazine:

49% of respondents in a recent survey conducted by Quicken said they had no emergency fund stashed away.

Holy cow! Are you kidding?

Having an emergency fund is one of the basic building blocks of good money management. If almost half of the population is missing it on something so simple and basic, imagine how many are in trouble on the more complicated issues related to financial planning!

For more thoughts on getting/having an emergency fund, see these links:

January 12, 2007

Poor Financial Health of the Average American

Here are some thoughts from the book The Net Worth Workout: A Powerful Program for a Lifetime of Financial Fitness (see my rating for details) on the poor financial health of the average American:

The average U.S. citizen works 44 years, then retires with a $46,000 net worth, excluding home equity. That represents just $1,000 for every year worked -- $83 for every month! Meanwhile, if such a person had invested $1,000 a year in the S&P 500 for fotry-four years, at age sixty-five, he would have $652,640! Ask yourself, What happened to that $600,000-plus of "missing" net worth?

I'll tell you what happened: new cars every few years, a house they can't afford, big screen TVs, vacations, present-filled Christmases, full cable packages, memberships to various clubs, etc. In short, people spend a lot of money on "wants" that many view as "needs."

Now I'm not saying that people shouldn't enjoy life, but they also have to make choices. Yet many people simply don't limit their choices (much) -- they see something they want, and they get it. Can't afford it? No problem, just borrow for it.

Becoming wealthy isn't that hard. In fact, it's rather easy. Want some examples? Check out these posts:

December 03, 2005

Fewer Americans Banking Online

Here's a stat from Business Week about older Americans and online banking:

21% of Americans 55 or older are banking online, down from 26% in 2004. Many feared their data might be sold by the bank or stolen.

Reasonable fears, as I've covered before:

December 02, 2005

Health Care Costs Rise

J0408006Here's an interesting money stat from Business Week:

Over the past five years, employers have hiked workers' annual contributions for family health coverage by 68%.

Yikes! I knew it had been painful, but seeing it in print somehow makes it even worse!

Here are a couple past posts you may want to read to help keep your health care costs as low as possible:

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