Posted on 01/04/2004 1:31:24 PM PST by Holly_P
"On the day I made the final payment on the house, I sealed the envelope and put the stamp on it," said Karen Manzo, 58. "Then I got up and walked through the house as if I owned it."
"Because we did," said her husband, Joe, 56.
"That was a powerful moment for me," Karen said.
At a time when the average American family has credit-card debt estimated at $9,000, the Manzos walk a different path. Middle-class people who live completely without debt, they follow the frugal prescriptions of one of their favorite books, "The Millionaire Next Door," a 1996 bestseller written by two professors who studied the nation's affluent.
The way to become wealthy, the Manzos say, is to live as if they're not wealthy. Or, in the words of the book's authors Thomas Stanley and William Danko: "Being frugal is the cornerstone of wealth-building."
The Manzos have made investing mistakes and lost money during the stock market's downturn. But they expect their thrifty lifestyle to bring them to a prosperous retirement in 10 years.
"As a byproduct of just trying to be debt-free, we accumulate wealth," said Karen, a lab technician in New Jersey. They declined to reveal their incomes or assets. But their financial planner, Lauren Locker, said they have accumulated an impressive amount on moderate incomes: "We would all be lucky to be in their position," Locker said.
The Manzos' lifestyle would not work for everyone. Their wedding 30 years ago cost all of $700. They do without cable TV. Karen squeezes the toothpaste tube "till it screams" and buys her clothes at Burlington Coat Factory and Value City (her sister teasingly calls her Karen Kmart).
Their tidy house in Paterson, N.J., was paid off in 15 years. (Danko, a professor at the University at Albany, State University of New York, said millionaires typically own less expensive houses than they can afford.) Though the Manzos, who are childless, are comfortable there, many middle-income families with children would prefer to avoid Paterson's troubled schools.
The Manzos also track their spending meticulously in two spiral notebooks one green, for money; the other black, because they're always in the black.
As a result, they are able to save all of Karen's paycheck about 40 percent of their pretax income.
"I think some people feel, 'What's the good of having money if you don't spend it?"' said Joe Manzo, a quality manager at a factory. "But there's a price to be paid. Debt is a self-inflicted injury. It's the choices you make. I like SUVs, but I drive a '99 Ford Escort. Our identities aren't tied to possessions. You could lose your possessions. Who you are is not what you own."
His wife sums it up: "I want to be as common as an old shoe."
It's not that the Manzos never spend money. They go to Broadway shows, sponsor a scholarship at a Paterson Catholic school and have vacationed in Costa Rica, Panama and Europe. Being thrifty, Karen said, means "I can purchase anything I want because I have a financial nest egg."
Although the Manzos describe their income as average, "The Millionaire" book points out, "Wealth is not the same as income. If you make a good income each year and spend it all, you are not getting wealthier. You are just living high."
The book gives the following yardstick for measuring assets: You should have an amount equal to your age times your annual income, divided by 10. So, for example, a 40-year-old couple with $100,000 income should have net worth of $400,000 not including home equity.
If you have double that, you're wealthy. The Manzos say their assets put them in the wealthy zone before the stock-market bubble burst.
"We made and lost a fortune in the stock market," Karen said. She ignored her husband's advice to sell tech stocks before their value collapsed in 2000.
After that, they went to Locker, the financial planner, for help. Karen also joined an investment club affiliated with the National Association of Investors, which advocates long-term investments in companies selling at the right price.
Karen's frugality was born of an Indiana childhood watching her parents struggle to raise five children on her father's salary as a draftsman. Her mother didn't hold down a job or even know how to drive. Karen wanted wider horizons and financial security.
She took 10 years to work her way through college. The fact that her education was so hard-won makes her even more determined not to squander the money it has helped her earn.
Her husband had help from his parents to pay for college, but it came at a great sacrifice to his father, a welder.
Karen is such a believer in debt-free living that she keeps a copy of "The Millionaire Next Door" at work to show to co-workers and summer interns. She recently spoke about her strategies to about 15 of Locker's clients. "She doesn't have a nickel of debt there's not another client I have like that," Locker said.
But several of them told her they could not imagine cutting their spending so radically. Even if they could, they said, their spouses would be unlikely to go along.
The Manzos know they couldn't have reached their financial goals without working together a point also made by "The Millionaire Next Door."
"We don't agree on everything, but these are the core beliefs that have sustained us for the 30 years we've been together," said Joe.
"There is no arguing about money," Karen said. "That argument is never in our household. One of the byproducts of a debt-free lifestyle is that you eliminate the Number One cause of marital breakdown."
That may be one reason why, in the book's words, "financially independent people are happier than those who are not financially secure."
"I'm definitely a contented person. I'm happy with my life," Karen said. "We have everything we want."
He probably has it all stashed in offshore accounts (hmm, those cost money to maintain that he wouldn't want to spend) or in his mattress at the homeless shelter.
At every family get-together we sit around and talk about my brother-in-law's legendary cheapness. He makes Jack Benny look like the greatest philanthropist. You remember that Seinfeld episode, where Kramer saves all his cans and bottles and drive to Michigan to cash in at 10¢ each. Well, brother-in-law did that in real life.
This guy goes to unbelievable extremes to save a nickel. He once had HIS OWN MOTHER push him in a wheelchair to the bus stop so that she could get on the bus with a "senior" discount and he could ride free as a "handicapped."
because you never know what might happen, or what medical expenses you might incur. Not easy to hop back in the job market at 70 years old if you want the money, unless you want Wal-Mart's money.
Have you tried to convince him to write a will donating his estate to a good charity? They're a hell of a lot more efficient that Uncle Sam. Hell, he can even get his name memorialized forever with the right kind of donation.
Paying college tuition isn't a substitute for real parenting.
So this couple was making $100,000 since birth? Or they made a slowly increasing income and yet the formula is based on their most recent income?
If one worked full time from after college at 22yo to 40 they would have to save $22,000 per year. To bank $22,000 at 80's and 90's tax rates they would have had to gross $35,000 per year and bank every penny with zero expenses.
Didn't happen. In the world that I live in everybody has expenses and did not pop out of college in the early 80's making $35,000 per year.
I'll take it a step further .....
Make sure that you make over a 100k, don't have any kids and never lose your job, have an accident, let someone fall on your porch, have a pipe break and flood your home, get a cavity, get sick, the list goes on and on.
PS: I almost forgot. Don't live on a planet that has taxes of any kind.
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