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by elbelcho
5500 days ago
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I disagree. Saving money for an emergency should be a priority over paying off a credit card debt. In an emergency, you cannot count on the credit card bank keeping your account open. You cannot count on them maintaining your current credit line. ALL banks are "evil" in the sense that they operate with their best interests at heart, and no matter how horrible of a position it may put you in, the CC bank has no obligation to maintain your current credit line. Having a $2000 emergency fund, even if it's in a shoe box under the bed, is more important and more VALUABLE than $2000 worth of open credit on a credit card. The $2000 under the mattress is almost entirely under your control. The $2000 in open credit is almost entirely OUT of your control. If you're in a real emergency, what would your rather rely on? |
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I think the point was that if you have credit card debt then you are in a emergency situation already. So using money to pay off that debt means you can get 'out' of the emergency. Paying off the debt and then putting $2,000 into a liquid account allows you to declare the emergency over.
The trick that folks often don't quite realize is that when you carry debt, some of your 'income' (whether its a paycheck or money back from recycling aluminum cans) goes to servicing that debt and not to your benefit. If you are living at the edge of your means, any money not going to supporting you directly is wasted.
That's the reasoning that says "priority #1" should be "get out of debt." #2 is build a "cushion" so that when unanticipated expenses hit you don't take a long term hit to the income stream, #3 is invest in longer term income growth (could be night classes, could be a washing machine to save on laundromat bills, could be stocks and bonds).