TD Canada Trust: Gen X/Millenials care more about savings than Boomers

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Saving is a good habit just don't leave it in cash or in a bank. Very soon default, banks close doors, empty boxes, hide in Switzerland in shadows while you boil paper certificates on engine block in winter wonderland. Be prepared or be sorry.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Sears bargain center. Just last week I scored 3 shiny new pair of Tiberland shoes for $9.99 a pair. My feet will still be the same size come fall and I'll need new shoes. When you see a deal like that, you've got to jump.
Sh*t....Sorry....I made a mistake I didn't pay $9.99 a pair.



They were $9.74
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
27,780
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Saving is a good habit just don't leave it in cash or in a bank. Very soon default, banks close doors, empty boxes, hide in Switzerland in shadows while you boil paper certificates on engine block in winter wonderland. Be prepared or be sorry.


This summer we pulled a huge chunk of our savings out, and paid cash for land. What a great feeling. Concrete, usable, never going anywhere.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
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Gen Xers are for the most part children of the "Quiet Generation". People that were children during WWII so they still experienced the Great Depression and penny pinching of the WWII years... albeit from a very young age. Maybe we get our money saving traits from them?

I have very little debt. I have an American Express credit card for a large purchase that my debit card won't handle. It needs to be paid right away. I refuse to have a normal credit card. If you don't have the money... don't buy it.
 

Trex

Electoral Member
Apr 4, 2007
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There are also a fair number of pre retirement Boomers and Xers out there who feel it is perfectly logical
to carry mortgage debt into retirement.
Boggles the mind
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
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bliss
What most people my age talk about as impacting their money management is the mortgage crash in the 80's. I was a bit young, I didn't see as much of it.

But I also grew up in a small farming community (hubby and I both), and we watched our parents lose their shirts to farming.

That's where our impact comes from more than from anything residual of WWII
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
This summer we pulled a huge chunk of our savings out, and paid cash for land. What a great feeling. Concrete, usable, never going anywhere.

Magniffy, my old man said buy land they don't make it anymore, he was wrong, but I did it anyway. There are actually things to eat walking arround there right now and most of the landscape will burn. Land is #1. you can pick it up in your hands!
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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kelowna bc
I have dealt with two institutions financially and I like both of them TD is not one
of them. I am of retirement age, i have no mortgage, the farm expenses are paid
annually. I have older vehicles but I like my old truck and the new ones not so
much. I won't starve but I don't have ten million bucks but then I won't need as
much money in retirement. I have property in Atlantic Canada that I can build a
place on for the summer and live in the Okanagan in the winter.
Personally I won't scrounge for a living. I won't be on the golf course or skiing I
hate both. I have enough to keep me busy also when I leave the farm.
I am in the beginning process of starting an Internet radio station that I hope will
be on air sometime in September or October.
Money is a tool to assist you to do the things in retirement you want to do it is not
a financial prison that limits your choices in life if you have a goal and check on
how your doing from time to time. My future is not about how much money I have
its about what do I want to do with my money in retirement and to make sure I have
enough when I get there, or I have a revenue stream to get to what I want to do
and that I have.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
21
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kelowna bc
Petros the way I feel right now is one thing but when I am so old i don't remember
how to get home it will be time to leave until then i can look out my window and see
houses in the distance and that is good enough for me. That means several years
away but eventually that may happen
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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It's going to be tough to break the bond between the land that fed family for 110 years and that will feed family yet to come. It will be the saddest day of my life. When you eat the produce of that land it physically becomes a part of you and something happens spiritually that can't be described.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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It's going to be tough to break the bond between the land that fed family for 110 years and that will feed family yet to come. It will be the saddest day of my life. When you eat the produce of that land it physically becomes a part of you and something happens spiritually that can't be described.

Lay off the shrooms brah.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Vancouver Island
It's going to be tough to break the bond between the land that fed family for 110 years and that will feed family yet to come. It will be the saddest day of my life. When you eat the produce of that land it physically becomes a part of you and something happens spiritually that can't be described.

ONly if you like farming. I am not even all that keen on gardening although I love fresh veggies. My parents were both farmers. Both were musical. They never passed that gene along either.