RecessionWire

  • About
  • Ads
  • Contributors
  • Press
  • Contact


Recession Concesssions

This tag is associated with 1 posts

Topics

  • Food, Home and Style
  • News
  • Small Business
  • Spending and Saving
  • The Unemployed Life
  • The Working World
  • Trends and Entertainment

Have you seen us in…

This Is An Ad

Leading company offers fast, secure and easy online cash advances.

Other Sites We Like

  • Bargain Babe
  • Broke Ass Gourmet
  • Brokelyn
  • How I Got Laid Off
  • Laid Off and Looking
  • Out of Work Chicago
  • Pink Slipped
  • Recession Blogs
  • Recessionista’s Roadmap
  • Shoestring
  • Survival Insight
  • The 405 Club
  • The Daily Bail
  • The Recess Ends
  • The Recession Diaries
  • The Recessionista
  • Time.com's It's Your Money
  • Unemploymentality
  • WiseBread

What Are We Still Spending On?

By Sara Clemence ⋅ 1:43 pm July 31, 2009 ⋅ 3 comments

money-tape measure 150The downturn has forced everyone to give something up, whether frivolous or substantial.

Sacrfice isn’t necessarily bad. When we’re forced to make choices, we end up reflecting on what’s most important to us and why. We may relinquish unhealthy things: I have one friend who’s not smoking anymore. And when I asked one fashionable man what he was giving up in the recession, he though for a moment, then said, “Complaining.”

Here at Recessionwire, we’ve done Recession Concessions, an occasional series about what people are giving up—and what they’re insisting on keeping. One woman has been indulging in Starbucks even as everything else goes out the door. For me, it was the cleaning lady (HBO, dry cleaning and clothes got the ax). Now ShopDebtFree.com, a debt-free (i.e., cash-only) shopping mall, has released a consumer survey on on what people are still spending on, even as the downturn has forced them to cut back. This isn’t about rent or health care, but the less necessary expenses. Turns out, massages are out, but pets are in. Almost half of the 1,200 respondents are still going to restaurants, and 33 percent are still traveling. But that’s just a sign of how much we’ve all pared back–it means 67 percent are not…

If you enjoyed this story, print or share it!
  • email
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Tumblr
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Fark

—

Most Popular Posts

  • 10 Tips for Learning to Cook from Scratch
  • The 5 Questions You Should Ask an Interviewer
  • The Just-Laid-Off Checklist
  • Desks, Desks, Millions of Empty Desks
  • The Recession Will End... by 2010
  • 11 Easy Steps to Relocating
  • 20 Ways to Come Through When Someone You Love (or Even Just Like) Loses a Job
  • How Not to Look Desperate
  • Capital Thrift—Finding Clothing Bargains in Washington
  • Tax Tips for the Unemployed

Special Sections

Recent Posts

  • Upward Mobility Ticking Up, a Little
  • Lavish Them with Gifts, Lazy-Style
  • Hostel Travel Gets Even Cheaper
  • Poor Isn’t Where It Used to Be
  • Coping with Long-Term Unemployment
  • Is It Waste or Is It Wealth?
  • The Toughest City to Find a Job
  • Recession Lexicon: 99er
  • Free Financial Bootcamp
  • 80 Percent Off Restaurant.com Ends Today

We’re Talking About…

Wowzio
grab this · careers blog
  • About
  • Advertising
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Press

  • Culture
  • Living
  • Money
  • News
  • Small Business
  • Working
© 2010 Recessionwire. Entries (RSS)