Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work from home and cant relate at all. How much time do you actually spend "managing investments" or "shopping insurance" all day?
I spend like an hour a quarter on investments (they're managed). I need a car for other things so its a fixed expense whether I work or not. Insurance is generally a once a year decision, no? I eat lunch whether I work or not......
So? I guess I'm not much help, but if you find those things so overwhelming it makes sense why you might be un/underemployed.
NP but you can save A LOT of money by keeping on top of expenses and constantly renegotiating or looking for better deals. I know smart successful people who easily spend an hour or two a day making sure they’re maximizing rewards from their credit cards. It’s an upgraded form of coupon clipping and could be saving (thereby earning) PP significant money. So don’t knock it so quickly.
Anonymous wrote:OP - right now $45 works out like this. I am getting $20 an hour unemployment. So actually $25 an hour. I am all in since live in MoCo so almost 30 percent tax bracket so like another $7 off. Plus payroll taxes. SS etc another buck off.
So making $17 an hour.
If job had medical would do it. Cobra and mortgage are my biggest expenses. If unemployment ran out would do it.
My bills are at point $17 does nothing. In fact if I wanted Obama care might also be an issue.
I need around $145k to pay the bills. Remember that is taxable. But even at $145 can’t contribute much to 401k as need the income.
I think I can land a job soon. But to be honest it may be my last one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been unemployed a few months. But I realized working has costs, can’t get to home repairs on my own, commuting costs, can’t really manage investments, shop around insurance, negotiate with college on tuition. Stuff like that. Then commuting costs, lunch, childcare, take out etc.
I got a call for a 45 bucks an hour contracting gig. I kinda realized is it even worth it. Is this why folks over 55 forced out retire early? Maybe if off the books. But a taxable low income job with zero benefits is the worst.
Wait, you saying that $45/hour is a "low income job" and not "even worth it"? This might be the most out of touch post I've seen all year.
Anonymous wrote:Who is negotiating college tuition costs AND paying for childcare?
45/hr is $7200/mo before taxes. Assuming capacity to work, I would of course call that “worth it”. That’s a couple mortgage payments for me, or a quarter of the cost of a new car, or an annual Roth IRA contribution, or a nice family vacation. All things I value. So yes, worth it.
But what I’m guessing is that OP has someone else whose income pays for living expenses, cars, investment contributions, and vacations. Which is why they are sniffing at 45/hr. But in that case, is there any amount that would be worth it? If all your wants and needs are taken care of, then is there any amount of money worth working for? At that point, I’d look for a job (or more likely, a project or volunteer position) that had value to me outside of any compensation.
But most people need money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work from home and cant relate at all. How much time do you actually spend "managing investments" or "shopping insurance" all day?
I spend like an hour a quarter on investments (they're managed). I need a car for other things so its a fixed expense whether I work or not. Insurance is generally a once a year decision, no? I eat lunch whether I work or not......
So? I guess I'm not much help, but if you find those things so overwhelming it makes sense why you might be un/underemployed.
NP but you can save A LOT of money by keeping on top of expenses and constantly renegotiating or looking for better deals. I know smart successful people who easily spend an hour or two a day making sure they’re maximizing rewards from their credit cards. It’s an upgraded form of coupon clipping and could be saving (thereby earning) PP significant money. So don’t knock it so quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Been unemployed a few months. But I realized working has costs, can’t get to home repairs on my own, commuting costs, can’t really manage investments, shop around insurance, negotiate with college on tuition. Stuff like that. Then commuting costs, lunch, childcare, take out etc.
I got a call for a 45 bucks an hour contracting gig. I kinda realized is it even worth it. Is this why folks over 55 forced out retire early? Maybe if off the books. But a taxable low income job with zero benefits is the worst.
Anonymous wrote:I work from home and cant relate at all. How much time do you actually spend "managing investments" or "shopping insurance" all day?
I spend like an hour a quarter on investments (they're managed). I need a car for other things so its a fixed expense whether I work or not. Insurance is generally a once a year decision, no? I eat lunch whether I work or not......
So? I guess I'm not much help, but if you find those things so overwhelming it makes sense why you might be un/underemployed.