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by dalfonso 2507 days ago
Mine would be, "Don't be pennywise and pound foolish".

Sometimes it's worth it to spend the extra money. The example that's burned into my brain is hiring movers.

2 comments

> The example that's burned into my brain is hiring movers.

Or a nice coat. A nice coat doesn’t come cheap but it’ll last years.

(Actually I think this applies to clothing generally. I don’t buy many clothes because I rarely buy cheap clothes.)

You subscribe to the Sam Vimes "Boot Theory" of economics: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Vimes (sorry for general link due to mobile / bad internet). I do too.
I always buy cheap clothes because the rare times I decided to buy something expensive it lasted about the same time as the cheap ones give or take.
You need to care for them as expensive.

"This shirt's dry clean only, which means it's dirty" -Mitch

No. You aren't always an expert about things you buy. You should not then start to rely on the price as a proof of quality. If something is expensive it is either good quality or you have a greedy seller. To catch the greedy seller you need to understand what you buy. This is not always possible. Therefore: always buy the cheapest you can get if you aren't an expert or just don't buy.
Oh wow, this is such a misguided advice.

Assume it is the same advice government takes when procuring public projects...

The government has the task to know what it procures and also should have the resources for the task. However a single person doesn't always. Even for the government it is difficult. We all know stories about government being fleeced by providers.
You also have to know how to take care of them. Which requires work or paying folks. Even then the people who maintain it for you will give you instructions so it's still more work than t-shirt of the week
Grandma used to say "we can't afford cheap clothing"
That's "Don't sweat the small stuff", right?