| > The original poster is correct Seemingly not, else we'd have seen the math already. Also, 1. Not having savings (in the personal finance sense) does not mean one is living paycheque to paycheque. 2. The article you link to defines living paycheck to paycheck as a scenario where the family income does not cover expenses. Principal repayment is not an expense. Outside of the 1-2% with interest-only mortgages, anyone who is paying a mortgage cannot be living paycheck to paycheck under the definition you have given. They must have surpluses over and above expenses in order to do so. Again, the math does seem to work in that sense if you include children. But is there some reason we should be aware of newborns not making enough money to save? > Try to remain on topic and avoid ad hominem, please. 1. It is on-topic. It explains why multiple definitions are present. 2. Ad homiem implies being directed at a person. The statement is not directed at a person. |
In the links I posted several comments above, you'll find that it is considered an expense for the purposes of personal savings.
I don't disagree with your definition, btw, it's just not the common one.