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by GFischer 5501 days ago
I currently don't have U$ 2.000 (not an American, but having money for a rainy day should be worldwide), but I could raise them with a (high interest) loan in about 30 minutes.

The article says they don't count, though:

"29.5% said they would have to resort to credit cards, a home equity line of credit, reverse mortgage or unsecured loan. "

1 comments

I hate to break it to you but you're living beyond your means. A high interest loan is not an emergency fund. Ideally you should have enough money to live for 6-12 months if your income stopped tomorrow.

I know when I was younger I didn't have such things, but then the recession of 2002 hit and I found out really quickly how much it sucks trying to make a house payment with an unemployment check.

I know I am, but one of the niceties of a socialist system is that if I get fired, I get paid my salary for a year and a half in unemployment :) , plus three months' salary straight away.

I actually wish I was fired :) (though the black mark in the CV here is really bad). The really bad thing about this system is that it's based on seniority, if I switch jobs, I lose all those perks (start back at zero, only get some minor unemployment after 3 months on the job)

I'm also neither a homeowner nor a parent, and could scale back my spending to zero pretty quickly (moving in with my grandfather and selling my car). Not a long term strategy, obviously, and I am thinking of becoming a parent (in 2-3 years) which will force me to be way more conservative with money.