Time magazine is out with an interesting report, "Thrift Nation - How Americans Spend Now," featuring a series of vignettes that detail the impact the financial crisis is having on individuals from all walks of life. Examples include:
Chris Strong for TIMEBarbara, 46, and Kevin Lowe, 52, Grand Rapids, Mich.
The cell phones were canceled; so were all subscriptions and outside entertainment. We didn't go skiing this winter, and we won't be golfing over the summer. No more wine. We used our severance and some savings to pay off Kevin's 2008 Saturn and pay down the house. We debated whether to cancel the local newspaper, but in the end kept it for the Sunday coupons. We now eat every single item in the house until it's gone. If that means we have curly pasta and penne and spaghetti all mixed up, so be it. I have 101 ways to use half-eaten boxes of pasta. We're much more careful shopping — no more running in to get one or two things. We wait until we have a big list, and then buy only what's on that list — and at the local grocery warehouse, not the food boutique.
You'd be amazed at how you don't even know where your money goes. It took us a couple of months to get a firm handle on our expenses. There are some things you only pay a few times a year and you forget them, and then they crop up and you don't have $40 for the water bill or veterinarian. I distributed flyers around the neighborhood offering babysitting and elder-care services. I can take care of an infant for a few hours as well as any high school girl. I'm tired of waiting for someone else to offer me a job.
It's hard to invite people for dinner, so we don't accept many invitations. We went to the art show on the day tickets were discounted, and told friends we'd brown-bag our lunches. One of them said we could go to a cheap restaurant, but I can't. I'm not sure they really understand how it is. I know I didn't until it happened to me.
We are still confident something is going to come up. We have discovered we can live on a very small amount of money, but we need to find something with health insurance before our COBRA expires. We take turns having meltdowns.
Danny Wilcox Frazier / Redux for TIMEJody Windschitl, 49, Missouri Valley, Iowa
Our sales are up about 33% this year compared with last. As an industry, they say it's the "Obama effect." We have never been in business when the Democrats are in office. We've been told that gun sales go through the roof, and they weren't kidding. We can't even get stuff. Ammunition has just dried up all over the country. Right now we're so busy, we've had to hire one person. People are afraid also of the Democrats' putting a ban on firearms — that's the biggest fear factor.
I used to see about five M-15s sold a year. Until about two weeks ago, we were selling about five a week. Now it's three a week. More women are buying, especially older ones. A lot of them are widows who are alone, and they want to have self-protection, just because of the economy. We've had a lot of robberies and break-ins in our area, and they're attributing that to people being out of work.
Bill Cramer / Wonderful Machine for TIMENaisohn Arfai, 33, Philadelphia
I started in mid-July. I was a resident here, so I'm not entirely new to the system, but I'm new as an attending physician. You feel like you're at the front lines in emergency medicine. It's both rewarding and very painful at the same time. I feel like I've seen more people coming in in the past half-year telling me they can't afford their blood-pressure medicines. They haven't been able to see a doctor for a while. They used to have a doctor, but they're not covered anymore.
They come in when they've reached a point of desperation. They could be having a stroke or a heart attack or kidney failure. But more commonly what we see is people who are coming in with recurrent headaches. They feel lethargy. They feel like they're having blurred vision, headaches. Sometimes they have some mild chest pain or difficulty breathing. They come in, and they say, "I know my blood pressure's high. These are the kind of symptoms I get." It's frustrating, because you know you can remedy it temporarily, but in the long run, how can I be sure that these people are going to be seen by a physician after they leave?
There are times when people will come in and they'll need a chest X-ray, but they'll ask, "Well, how much is this going to cost me? How much is a CT scan going to cost me?" Oftentimes I don't see these people again. I don't get to see what happens after they leave the ER.
Here is the complete list:
- The Unemployed Couple
- The Sports CEO
- The Restaurant Owner
- The Autoworker
- The Financial Adviser
- The Blackjack and Roulette Dealer
- The Gun-Store Owner
- The Boutique Owner
- The Bulk Shopper
- The Organic Gardener
- The Movie-Theater Concessionaire
- The Emergency-Room Doctor
- The Grocery-Store-Outlet Owner
- The Therapist
- The Financial-Aid Officer
- The Doggie Day Care Owner
- The Free Health Care Clinic CEO











Worst financial advice, ever!
Matt Felber, 39, Cleveland
'One of my clients — 45 years old, a top executive — e-mailed me, "Should I sell everything?" I wrote back, "No, you're fine, you can ride this out." His return e-mail said, "I knew that was the right answer." I've been telling a lot of people that they're going to be O.K. They need to hear that right now.'
Posted by: Tyrone | July 02, 2009 at 11:45 PM
Look at this list and you see immediately what is wrong with this country: Only one works in manufacturing, farming, or mining. The rest are drones.
This is an unproductive society. Even the emergency room physician and his complaints about hypertensive patients not receiving medicine: With Walmart and Target offering $4 generics, there is no excuse. Less than a pack of cigs, and I know of few hypertension drugs that could not be prescribed even by a pharmacist, saving the trip to a doctor. We have to get out of this notion that every ailment requires a trip to the Mayo Clinic or its equivalent.
Some of the occupations even make me laugh at the fact that we need them.
Posted by: Printfaster | July 03, 2009 at 10:37 AM
Maybe the unemployed couple should spend less time staring at the floor and more time looking for employment.
Posted by: Talnik | July 03, 2009 at 11:33 AM
For decades most people thought this was the best
of all worlds(after all Readers Digest said so)and
Fortune Magazine confirmed it!and Disney Land put
the icing on the cake.Reagan,Bush, Greenspan,Milton
Friedman where Gods,Speculation on Gambling Ave.
(Wall Street)was going to guaranty a retirement
worthy of a millionaire.Any progressive thinking person
was either a commy or a socialist(as if there some kind
immorality in being a socialist) Well folks you reap what
you sow.
Posted by: roger | July 03, 2009 at 12:09 PM
"If that means we have curly pasta and penne and spaghetti all mixed up, so be it." My wife and I have always lived like that. Why on earth not?
Posted by: dearieme | July 03, 2009 at 06:11 PM
Roger,
Couldn't agree more. After reading that I thought to myself, "So you used to throw away partially used packages of pasta?" Morons.
Posted by: Tyrone | July 03, 2009 at 09:17 PM
The way the first two are dressed, they don't look like they've ever done any serious work. I would have canceled the newspaper first, that way I would'nt be lied to everyday on how the "green shoots" are going to turn things around. Get your coupons from the free paper at the coffe shop.
Posted by: Hangtown | July 03, 2009 at 10:58 PM
These people are all lazy bums. Saw a local pizza delivery and car wash hiring. I'm sure those jobs would be beneath the people in this article.
America still has millions and millions of jobs. Barring injury, 95% of all unemployment is self inflicted. We should legalize all the illegals and have them kick the folks in this article out of their homes. The mexicans live off air, and still manage to send home money to mom.
Posted by: Polster | July 04, 2009 at 11:57 AM
How 'bout some shepard pie for those folks?
German Shepard.
I'm sorry to comment twice on this but each time I see the picture I get more disgusted. They're getting no sympathy from me.
Posted by: Talnik | July 04, 2009 at 04:36 PM
Still funny to me that NOBODY seems to get it:
Your JOBS are GONE because of the greed of this nation.
Making $10.00 an hour at a job (even if both of the couple made it) DOES NOT qualify anyone to buy a $300.000 McMansion or a $60.000.00 Lexus SUV. This is why articles like this one are being written on people who are "barely making it". Thank your greedy and foreclosed friends and neighbors for your plight.
No home sales equals no jobs. No home sales equals no buying. Layoffs, etc.
Next time buy a calculator and learn to use it.
Posted by: American Pie | July 05, 2009 at 11:14 AM