Being poor costs more in so many ways. The additional stress put upon so many people day after day thinking and worrying about how to feed their families and pay the next electric bill, etc leads to mental health problems and effects them physically as well do to lack of proper nutrition. You're right Nate, people who need money and help the most are the ones who are taken advantage of most often.
Many have inadequate cooking access, rent a room that doesn’t allow cooking. They don’t know how to feed their family inexpensively with good nutrition. Infestations in an apartment building of rats, mice or roaches that gnaw through containers and contaminate food.
Being poor is litterally a drawn out death sentence while being tortured the whole way down. Can't afford the $150 to fix your tooth cavity? Guess you'll just have to wait until it hurts more and costs $3,000 for a root canal. Can't afford that? Guess you'll just die of an abscess in pain. Funeral bill to your family - $15,000 to bad you didn't have that initial $150 bucks.
Did my grocery bill just jump 10%? Feels like I'm working harder for the same amount of stuff. Gotta find ways to stretch my budget further or this inflation thing is gonna flatten my wallet.
I hear you. Curbing spending is key. Look for cheaper alternatives, clip coupons, and maybe even consider a side hustle to boost your income. Every bit helps fight inflation's bite.
Firstly, rack your spending, identify areas to cut back, and free up money to weather inflation's storm. A financial consultant can help you analyze your budget and identify areas to cut back without sacrificing your lifestyle.They can also explore ways to boost your income through strategic investments. One client I worked with saw their portfolio grow by 12% last year, allowing them to build a buffer against inflation.
“SONYA LEE MITCHELL” is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
Shop at Aldi, use a credit union, keep track of finances and have a plan. Buy a cheap new car with 0% financing and save. I’ve always been poor but never ignored reality.
The only case where I could see that a poor person has a car is if they bought a car when he was not poor. But usually the poor cannot afford their own car and use public transport instead.
It's been a rough year with losses from failed banks, real estate crashes, a struggling economy, and downturns in stocks and dividends. It feels like everything has been going wrong. What a terrible year it is…
I’d point out that if you’re poor then you have to buy cheaper stuff, like clothes, phones, cars, food etc… all of which will cost you more in the long run. Buy cheap clothes and phones multiple times, cars have issues and always in need of repair, food will make your health worse if you’re not wise with it and cost you in life value and monetarily
i disagree with the cars. the real problem is the car loans that kill wealth. i buy cheap clothes they seem to last as long as the expensive stuff and never get the latest and greastest phone as its not finacially wise. i can agree on the food as its bigger % of budget.
In living the poor life in europe but not because i have to but because im trying to live on the bare minimum to afford hoarding silver and stocks this also made me better at handling money this video is worth gold
@@jasoncasey583It is hardly that easy elsewhere either. In Finland, there was just a report that the poor can no longer afford to go to second hand stores, thrift shops and flea markets because the prices have gone up there as well and some customers have started stealing used clothes without paying. And previously, the problem has also been that although women's and children's clothing has always been well available, there has been a shortage of men's clothing.
In these uncertain times, it's more important than ever to have a solid understanding of how to manage your finances, invest wisely and navigate economic downturns. But my primary concern is how to grow my reserve of $240k which has been sitting duck since forever with zero to no gains, sure I'm all in on the long term game, but with my savings are lying waste to inflation and my portfolio losing gains everyday, I need a remedy.
If you need advice, consider speaking with a financial advisor. Don't get me wrong, you can do it on your own, but financial advisors have a lot more knowledge and expertise in this area.
you are completely right, Advisors have information and paths that are not disclosed to the public.. I profited £560k in 2022 under the tutelage of my Fiduciary-counselor. Am I selling? Absolutely not.. I am going to sit back and observe how this all plays out.
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Melissa Terri Swayne” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I really appreciate you using your platform to showcase some of these issues; especially since this doesn't necessarily affect your target demographic. Other similar ideas that you didn't explore include: - The extra cost for paying bills monthly instead of annually (such as car insurance) if you can't afford one massive payment. - Poor folks not having the money up front to buy in bulk to save money in the long run. - Interest rates being higher for used cars than for new ones. -Medical issues getting worse and costing more in the end since you couldn't afford to promptly take care of them (i.e., a cavity getting so bad that you now need a root canal and crown. A $200 issue is now a $1200 issue.)
Lack of education for multiple reasons. Higher incidence of being illiterate and having poor math skills. Property taxes that are disproportionate to their income. Little to no financial training. Cashing a paycheck can cost 3% of their pay or more, with little access to banks. It’s estimated that 30+% of Americans don’t have bank accounts.
He's using scare tactics to make you continue to watch his tutorials. SCARE TACTICS WORK. I must say his narrative is also very well-organized. He tells you up front that he'll be discussing pitfalls and not solutions, which is really important to know right away. It builds trust with your audience when you're transparent which he is.
@@evelynzlon9492interesting perspective. Ultimately the viewer will interpret a video however it they see fit. As someone that was watched his videos since the beginning I have to respectfully disagree. Nate has mentioned previously that he isn’t huge on being a “social media” influencer. He does a lot of research and simply shares the truth. Most of his knowledge is through books, experience and school. I doubt he cares to “scare you” I feel that is a defensive mentality. Rather take in his advice and use it as fuel to NOT fall victim to the broken economic system and how divisive it can be. He started RUclips at a very young age and quickly became successful by hard work not luck. Just trying to say Nate is worthy of more than just a fear mongering channel.
Good compliment to Nate, but you describe him as "comfortable" and I would"nt describe him as "comfortable " because I'm sure he works his tush off for whatever he has!
Business avoid the areas known as food deserts because of crime... its a vicious cycle. People turn to crime because the are desperate... but the same crime they commit hurts them and others like them more.
The numerous government programs also keep people poor. If the government is giving you 10K a year if you make below 40K a year and you find a job that makes 45K you are going to stay at your same crappy job because of that free money you get from the government. I know of several people that will purposely look for a low paying job just for collecting money from the government such as food stamps, free medical, rent assistance. All this stuff can easily add to 20K in government assistant. The solution is to get rid of that poor mindset and learn a skill that can give you a healthy paycheck. It is up to the individual not the government to fix this. Government intervention just makes it worse.
My favorite poor person experience was when my ten year old tire exploded and I needed to get a new one. Couldn’t afford to get the others replaced and it messed up the frame. The $800 fix turned into a $2000 fix and I only got to pay it off when I won at a casino. Had to pay taxes on the winnings later
@@SouLoveReal to be clear I don’t gamble really at all. I had $20 at the end of the month and it was my only option short of getting a loan I had no hope to pay off
Here's my reply to the people that are leaving negative comments like the one above. Don't put people down who are already down. Give them a hand up. If everyone helped someone less fortunate than themselves we wouldn't have poverty. Living in poverty creates a chain reaction of negative events. Those events pile up very quickly and make life pretty miserable.
In Canada, they cracked down on payday loans because of how detrimental to society. They made a law where the loaners can’t charge more than $20 per $100 borrowed, instead of traditional payday loan structures. Many of the payday loan companies now focus on other services like international money transfers, prepaid credit cards, cashing cheques and business services.
Nate, I was doing a return at a Walmart on a Friday night and there were 4 people in a row on front of me paying Walmart to cash their paychecks for them. I couldn’t even believe it!! Financial education needs to start at such a basic level.
This is also why it's important for businesses to continue to accept cash. There seems to be a growing trend amongst businesses to only accept credit cards and refuse cash
I was in an uber , (unusually going through the posh Kensington area of London )and both the driver and I noted that there weren't any fast food outlets there, just dessert /patisserie venues , made us think that fast food places target the more deprived areas . Hadn't seen such a clear distinction until then.
Great video. Two things I'd like to add: 1. Parking ticket or even government tickets usually have this kind of incentive that if you pay in the first 10 days, you get 20 or 30% off. It take time for low-income people to find money to pay the tickets, so they are the people usually end up paying more. 2. A lot of low-income people don't use credit cards, let along good credit cards that offer cash back or points. So comfortable people can use the points or cash back to somewhat balance out the invisible cost you mentioned, but not those low-income people who pays cash.
If you can find a place to live for cheap where you don’t need a car, suddenly you have the freedom to save much more money. Used and new Cars are one of America’s biggest wealth killers.
Buying a home. If you don't have have enough to put a 20% down payment on a home mortgage, you have to pay the PMI (private mortgage insurance) on top of your principal, interest, and escrow(if you're doing this). You literally pay more for having less money because they don't believe you can pay off a mortgage.
I don't consider myself poor and I did put down 5%..paid $80 PMI for $300k loan and then eliminated it a year later. It still was cheaper than renting an apartment. This year there was a law that low credit score holders get better rate than those with higher ones. I think PMI in this case will be covered by lower % rate for "poor"
@@gulkinna I believe it was still cheaper than renting an apartment. How much total in PMI did you pay in that first year until you eliminated it? Haven't heard of the low credit score/better rate law. Is that federal or local to you? Good to know.
I mean, lenders need to protect themselves somehow. You can't just have everyone getting a loan that can't afford it for whatever reason and then they can't make their payments. As much as it sucks and is costly it makes sense. How would you protect yourself if you were the lender?
The thing about food deserts is so spot on, Walmart has more affordable things like bread, and milk but when you go to a dollar store it is much more expensive even though stuff is supposed to be "cheaper" but Walmart isn't in walking distance but the dollar stores always are.
I worked 5 years as a manager of a dollar general in general the food was competative and cheapest beer in town however home cleaning stuff etc medicines were priced pretty high those stores make more profit than you would ever imagine
@@jasonleatherwood2172 the profit margin these dollar stores 🏬 make are absolutely ridiculous and come from hardworking people who are honest and don’t steal hence the majority of humans.
Very important issue!! Thank you Nate! I'd like to mention education here. The poor often drop out of school to get a job to help their parents and has low or no access to higher education, they can only get into low paid jobs which keep them poor. While the rich get higher education, then get into high paid jobs and get richer
Some kid's in poverty can't get a legal job because if their parents are on social assistance that income is counted towards their household allowance and the family loses assistance.
WOW! POINT ON! What a great video that definitely needs to be addressed so thank you for being the person to speak on this subject matter. But WOW as I'm listening my mind and thoughts are all over the place of what I want to say, but I will keep or contain myself from posting political comments , very reason why I left Facebook ( well a lot of reasons why I left Facebook LOL) But you are right how being poor costs more. I know, I am age 58 , my income is Social Security Income , I only receive the yearly COLA increase, it helps but not enough . But I know there are many millions of Americans who are poor , live in rural areas and getting around is costly as far as transportation. For me I have had to give up a lot in my life seeing I live on a limited income. I did watch a video you posted I think about a year ago on how to spend $30 a week for groceries. That's me, I have a budget of $120 per month for food , I have had to cut out a lot of food options and choices. But I still consider myself fortunate, I am in a shared living situation with a friend , we share expenses and that makes it doable to live life a little , fortunately we both love nature so most of our entertainment is "outdoor" once a month we are able to dine out, and once or twice a year we are able to travel but only with in the United States. Any traveling aboard is not an option for us. The solution ? There's probably a million ways to address that, I lived most of my life in financial ruins and I worked , but no job stability , moving from place to place in the last 10 years took a huge financial loss, I have learned the hard way (and believe me it wasn't pretty) . My life is more stable now and a bit more financially stable, we learn from our mistakes especially when it comes to money. People do need to be educated about their spending, whether it be a financial consultant , make some courses , I like to believe there is always a way . But as far as food, food prices are taking a toll on all of us, I know, I have cut out so much food , but in a good way, no snacks, no processed foods, no pastries, or what ever junk food there is. I am also a Certified Health Coach , I specialize in nutrition for healthier eating. So it's a good thing that I cut out the "junk" and add in the "healthy foods" But I also know it's not as easy for those who have nutriition insecurity, this is a real thing here in the United States and these issues do need to be addressed. Every one has the right to healthy and sustainable food , a home , proper transportation etc.
Man I really expected you to cover the Dollar store "tax". It's best exemplified there, you can go get a dollar store specific size of laundry detergent, because all you have is the $5. The problem is you're paying way more per ounce of detergent than you'd pay if you could afford the $50 at Costco for the gallons size. Bulk purchasing in general is a huge thing with that but I think the laundry detergent is the best example you can use.
Thanks for posting this video Nate. I think a lot of folks who are well off won't even listen to points like the ones you make here. They've already decided with little to no real evidence or experience that being poor is a choice. They just continue existing in their ignorant comfortable bubble. I also don't know the answers but it at least starts with everyone recognizing the problems you described here.
Decades ago, being poor was typically more "optional" than it is now. These days it's a lot harder to fundamentally improve your standard of living no matter how hard you work. The housing costs-to-income ratio is much higher than it was historically, and the cost of a college education has skyrocketed so student loans consume a much larger proportion of your income. The most reliable way to break into a higher class bracket is usually through lucrative blue collar jobs. Certain truck drivers earn a great deal of money, for example. However these drivers usually transport hazardous materials AND they're still held in low esteem by educated professionals. There's a price to pay for upward mobility, one way or another. America is actually becoming more like England whose rigid class system was hard to crack.
@@evelynzlon9492. F what thise so called "educated" people think about the job you do If you are making money.Especially more than them. Most those people are in debt up their arses and are just in an extended downfall themselves.
@@fugoogle5345 I have a B.A. in Economics but my academic performance was marred by apathy so I'm not actually competitive for related careers. However I think people can SENSE your course of study. Most people just ignore me on the street, but guys wearing business suits are usually cordial even if I'm wearing street clothes and a doo-rag and have nothing apparently in common with them. Isn't that weird?
@@fugoogle5345 My initials are also E.Z. So my collegiate apathy in my conservative major was largely born of despair. DO YOU UNDERSTAND ME? I once tried out to become a fashion model which includes illustrious success stories like Duckie Thot. However I lack the self-discipline to become anorexic. Now if you consider Nate's surname 2 different words contracted by an apostrophe, his initials are NOB. And he was a millionaire barely out of diapers. Isn't THAT something?
@@fugoogle5345 I also had a stint as a professional psychic. I had a low accuracy rate by industry standards, but when I AM right, I'm right to a T. Or an R, which is my guess for Nate's middle initial.
If you ever get an overdraft fee or even a late payment fee you can call and ask them to forgive it. Typically they will, especially if it's your first time.
@@moneycessity the other day my chase credit card went over the limit .. I was busy but ended up paying within a couple of days .. but that was enough to drop 35 points on the FICO score 🙄
As somebody who grew up in this type of environment, I can tell you one thing, there are tons of things that make it worse very for starters, sound financial management is not only not taught, Your tattoo avoid looking into that which further adds to the type of mindset that keeps you there. People are not to be resourceful and think from a scarcity mindset. That's something my parents instill than me and undoing that was extremely difficult. We weren't just poor. We were taught to stay poor and think poor
@@AnimeErudite Who’s to say they did? They are watching this video which does teaches something. Also, I just assumed based off of the comment saying “grew up in this type of environment,” that they were referencing when they were a kid and didn’t really have any financial control, so financial education may not have been as useful to them until they were old enough to work. They also used the past tense “were” in “We were taught to stay poor and think poor,” which to me implied this all happened in the past and may be better now. I can’t help but feel your comment is just a dig at their past which they didn’t choose, not an actual constructive question, as no one “teaches you to avoid looking into financial education,” lmao
Price for soda is insane! Why would anybody drink it when it's so expensive and also bad for your health? Actuality, it makes be taxed you double: at the time you bought it and when you get medical bills to pay after what you've done with your body
Its some of the cheapest ready to drink drinks besides water and we are conditioned to want it from an early age with all of the advertising and how convenient soda is in fountain machines at food places and gas stations.
@wendytestaburger8321 food deserts exist in areas where there is little to no real food(fresh fruit/veggies meats) or even grocery stores within a community or within a reasonable distance.
Great perspective Nate and well done. My heart is with the people who just want to get by and live their lives in these food deserts. I also can't blame large stores who won't go into these places or pull out there existing stores due to various "reasons".
One woman, when she retired, in a medium sized city wanted to make a difference. She opened a very small grocery store. It was all generic, no name food, frozen meat kept behind the counter, cheese and dairy in a clear refrigerator next to the meat case. Fresh fruits and vegetables were available. Most food was kept in the back and restocked as sold. She kept prices low by having volunteer workers and being a non-profit. The store was small so only allowed about 10-12 shoppers at one time. This also allowed her to know her customers and them to know her. No candy, cookies, soda, bakery beyond sandwich breads.
In Canada, recently vendors have been given the right to charge credit card fees to the clients using them. On a large purchases paying cash, cheque or debit can essentially be a discount. This was legislated because the credit card companies forbid cash discounts in the vendor agreements. About time.
Yep. I live in a small town in Minneapolis. It is really common for all local businesses to charge a 3% fee for non-cash purchases to cover the processing fees. It’s kind of annoying because I prefer to earn points with a credit card, but I admit it is more fair for me to pay the fees than in being past on to someone who may be more poor than me.
I have three answers for people who are having trouble with parking tickets, bicycle E bike or small motorcycle especially the bike and regular bicycle. You don’t have to register them so you should not be able to get a parking ticket plus bring it in your house there you go nobody can put a ticket on if it’s in your living room.
* Rent-to-own appliances. * High utility deposits due to credit scores. *Higher car and home insurance for the same reason. *High rental deposits because of past evictions (and bad credit). * High interest at the "buy here, pay here" car lot. I'm sure there are more. There is a long list.
I’d like to point out for anyone who didn’t know, the government considers 29k annual NET income per person as the poverty line now. So it’s getting out of hand when most jobs pay around or less than that
I was just thinking about some of these topics when my vehicle registration renewal arrived in the mail. $100 or so in property tax and other flat fees when just registering a car can take a bigger chunk out of lower income individuals paychecks than higher earners who won't even notice it.
You have an youtube channel with 1,31 millons followers. Pretty impressive. Don´t know why poor pleople are poor? Let me tell you. It´s not that poor people work less than rich people. No, as a matter of fact some of them even work more. Much more. They even have several jobs in the Unated States or have jobs with long hours in the rest of the world. They lift heavy things and work under poor conditions. Poor people are poor because ¨They think differently from rich people¨. That´s the reason. They see everything in terms of scarity instad of abundance. That´s why. People who either were born in a wealthy family or made their way up to the top, think complete different from poor people. They see opportunities where poor people see obstacles, they see money almost everywhere, where poor people as you said ¨live from paycheck to paycheck¨. It´s a matter of mindset. They have a minset of scarity. That´s why. Hope it has been usefull. Love. Good luck with your channel.
Whenever I have less money than I planned to have or I want to save a bit more, a part from budgeting and trying to stick to it I get what I am going to use out of the bank and I have it in cash, I personally find it easier to lower my expending with cash in hand. Besides, in Spain they don’t really give us a lot of incentives for using the bank (they do using Revolut for example but I don’t want to pay monthly to a bank I mean, they are already using my money, what else do they want?! 😂😂😂) Please try to upload videos more often 🙏🏼
Thank you for the video. I live in low income apartments and have been denied disability. I earn less than 7000 a year working for my well to do family. They are benefitted in so many ways that people like myself are not. They're friends who are also upper class are even wealthy give then things frequently such as furniture, food, gift cards, concert tickets, tickets to sporting events, free admission somewhere, discounts at places they work are even own such as restaurants, dry cleaners, car dealerships, real estate companies, gyms, theaters etc. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer or you could say it's all in who you do or don't know. I see this type of thing on the daily and am just grateful that I am connected so I benefit a small amount compared to many in my financial bracket such as my neighbors.
@@wendytestaburger8321Disability in the United States is usually SSDI or SSI. The individual has to prove to the Social Security Administration that they are truly disabled and most people have great difficulty doing that. We have lawyers here to help fight for disability but even then getting it is hard. If a disabled person gets approved for disability payments it's almost always a low payment that prevents the disabled person from being able to live normally. For example, $1483 is the average SSDI monthly payment to a disabled person but I know many living on a lot less than that who can't work and are about to face homelessness. The system over here in the United States for the disabled is really sad.
On the overdraft fees or bounced checks, sometimes a person will deposit a check thinking the check has gone through, but it's either denied or delayed. So, people spend money when they actually don't have any. Then, depending on how the bank deals with this, there may be multiple overdrafts, each with their own fees or bounced checks, leading to a cascade of problems.
Yup, I worked for a business that was all cash. They had an ATM in the premises. At average, they made 10,000. Per month. A credit card company convinced them they would make more revenue if they offered credit card payments. Now the pay in fees 30,000. and up per month. And of course they had to raise their prices. 😢
Also, car dealership commercials. I always hear them say: BAD OR NO CREDIT? YOURE APPROVED! NO DOWN PAYMENT? NO PROBLEM! What they are hiding is that that person will be tried down to high monthly car payments for a long time! I hate it!
Graduate from high school, get a job, don't be an addict, and postpone having children until after marriage. Excuses are like buttholes. Everybody has one, and most of them stink.
I’m by no means rich, but I used to be barely scraping by. One thing I can add is when you get paid weekly, it’s really hard to budget a month ahead unless you’ve already established an emergency account. When I was broke that was a laughable concept on it’s own.
Being content, and knowing how to cook, clean, and fix a few things make the difference. Actually the only way for most low income to survive with dignity.
Being poor cost more. You can’t afford to go to the Denist. Can’t afford to eat healthy, can’t afford to go to the Doctor. Bank makes you more broke charging NSF Fees. Bad credit makes you have higher interest rates making you more poor.
I just don't understand why people wouldn't drink water - I guess maybe if you're in poverty you can't afford a place with drinkable water - but isn't water less expensive than soft drinks?
The solution to credit card fees would be a cap fees by law putting a price cap for merchants at 1% plus a 5 cent fee per transaction. Credit card processing fees are an essential service for businesses and visa and master card know it and charge 3% plus 30 cents and that cost is a top 3 cost for most businesses.
Another huge thing is the amount of poor people who have to live on disability. If you are disabled, you’re unable to work and receive healthcare through your job. If you make more than a certain amount (a very low threshold) then your medications and hospital visits will no longer be covered. People have to stay poor and continue struggling because their conditions (type 1 diabetes, MS, etc) require necessary medical care. It’s a hot mess.
I find it interesting how you said you don't want to get political - but money is very political and we shouldn't stray away from that. The wages low-income people make is political. The healthcare we pay for is political. The rent we pay is political. Thanks for shedding light on this topic.
Here in the UK some banks offer accounts with no overdraft feature, so if you try making a payment with a debit card for say £10.00 but you only have £9.50, either the payment gets declined or the merchant will try taking it and the amount bounces back. My solution to credit card fees is just don't have a credit card. You'really borrowing the money from the card company, so clearly you can't afford the thing you just bought on credit, because you pay that ammount plus any interest fees every month or however often it is.
insurance is a big one. You can pay double from just going monthly. end up more than a lot of peoples insurance. not to mention insurance is even effected from things that don't play into insurance. for example car insurance can be more expensive for getting a ticket going 8mph over, while statistically someone going 5-10mph under causes more axidents. Infact the whole transportation system is abusive towards poor people. The only way to have an advantage in it is by being fluent in cars. ie knowing whats reliable, cheap to repair, some repairs at home, etc. Most people opt in for the less knollegable option of buying a new car and paying more upfront, to avoid thinking of repairs. my car has 203k miles and I've only had to take it to the shop once, only time the CEL came on for a bad coolent line, which I've been topping off regularly up to that point.
As a person with money and good credit the advantages for me are(not being sarcastic or brag btw): free Credit card points(free money) for spending money. 10% cash back in my gasoline and grocery. Buy in bulk and on sale to save money and store in my bigger house. Work from home to save gas and money and doing laundry and chores while at home. Able to pay more for a Toyota to avoid car issues. Tax advantage account and amazing growth on investments growing potentially tax free. My living expenses is very small compared to my income and net worth. I was raised poor and still live with a very frugal mentality.
Here’s one for you. Costco does a thing where you buy like $150 worth of certain type of grocery and get $50 back. I think the last one was cleaners. Laundry soap, dish soap and such. Poor people can’t participate.
Tax are the buggiest problem. I have no problem paying tax on my pay check but it’s ridiculous when you have to pay tax too when you buy a bottle of water. And they will tax Reaturant and now Reaturant have a to raised a price they have on their menu and then tax you again. I feel like tax on food are keep getting worse as time go by
Lived in poverty. Dont use your checking account as a credit card. If you dont have a bank account, you wouldn't have the option to overdraw. The biggest problem is banks require $500 or more in the account or they charge a fee. So many have to go to check cashing places that rob a large %
I live in a food desert, which is in the ghetto right across the street from a homeless shelter. That is so disgusting for these greedy people to do that to others. But nobody changes things or gets a sense of morals.
It sucks to live in the edge. I did live in relative poverty for a while, but our family always helped so we never had huge issues. Today, I work and provide for myself, and even invest. But yes, it costs more to be more poor... this is especially true if you rely on a car go get a job.
Nobody seems to talk about how lower paying jobs don't have contracts usually. I have zeros two years in the middle of my working career in my ss statement. Did I not work? Ofcourse I did. Employer chose not to pay us at all. It was just customers who did. We also didn't get paid for training. There was no break during the twelve hour shit and I ended up in ER few times. I was not in a position to question or argue any of it back then. The ones who were, got fired. I barely made minimum wage working and my boss chose not to pay the 2.77 an hour for two years. He went on to open a second restaurant with all the money he saved. This wasn't the only place that didn't pay. Some didn't even give you all the money customer's left. Two jobs cost me more to go to work that to stay home. While they paid with check, they didn't make it up to the minimum wage.
Thank you for talking about this. Redlining is not just for residential real estate. It also applies to business real estate. Businesses in poor areas have higher insurance because of an increase in violence in these poor areas, so the big chains won't invest in those areas. Hence, the small stores who charge higher prices.
Payday Loans = Legal Loansharking Also being someone who is in the 'Extreme Poverty' level, I will say that there is no such thing as the 'trickle down' effect; The 'trickle up' effect, is 100% in effect everywhere though. The rich get richer, the poor get poorer. And those that are in power, have no intention of changing it, as those in power ARE the problem.
I’ve been there and I cut back my meals and ate at friend’s houses. I would walk everywhere even if it took me a hr to get there so my gas would last longer. I shopped at the $1 store. I would repeatedly return to exchange clothes so I wouldn’t have to wear worn clothes or spend more money for new ones. 90day return policy was the best. I brought a pack of cigarettes and stood at a bus stop in the middle of nowhere and sold them for a $1 sometimes 2 each. Being poor often means you have to be strategic in ways to make and save money.
The price increase due to benefits is so tricky. Because you feel like your getting money but in reality your just paying as much as you would if credit companies didn't exist.
What very often causes food deserts are that the stores are getting robbed blind. Of course the stores will close and leave under those circumstances. But nobody wants to talk about that or crack down on the shoplifting.
How about extra costs when you need to finance consumer items like furniture and appliances. Phone carriers and car insurance often give a big discount for pre paying in full. Also you can get discounts for putting bills on autopay. Wholesale clubs offer a significant discount oftentimes but you have to have the $60 for a membership and then be able to pay more upfront for large quantities of groceries.
The poor don't pay 1.5% to 3% extra on their groceries, so they are not flipping the bill. The merchant is choosing to take that loss for ease of transaction, less money being handled by Employees. Merchants could offer a 1.5% to 3% off if cash is spent.
I tried the dollar tree once but quickly noticed that the price per ounce on food was higher than Walmart. So I just use Walmart. I search for a bank with free checking, I am not paying for checking since they get money every time I use my debit card. If you replace the word poor with stupid, you begin to really see the problem. Stupid complains about being poor not being stupid.
You just pissed off a bunch of people with a victim mindset but not me. This motivates me to hurry up and stop being poor. I would love for intelligent, creative and thoughtful people such as you and your brother and dozens of others to be in the same room to help come up with clever and effective solutions to the wealth inequality thing… I love capitalism but in my opinion no one should have more than one billion dollars in net worth. The rest of their earnings should go towards addressing food deserts and dozens of other problems. Credit cards and predatory loans should be banned. Capitalism runs through my blood but you get to a certain point where you realize we have allowed these corporations to run rampant, they don’t have our best interest at heart. I’m in favor of ethical capitalism with a hint of socialism. As soon as I get rich, I’m gonna use my money to reshape our antiquated systems. Nate, this was a great video idea, super creative! Thanks for the insight / reminder, I gotta get back to work!! ✌️😎 y’all have a fruitful and blessed day!!!
So you're advocating for a cap on earnings for store owners and directing them on how to spend their "extra"? You my friend want capitalism for your self and socialism/communism for high earners. Can't have it both ways.
OK I like the comment where you were like. Oh people just say don’t overdraft and then you were like well they probably have an experience poverty. Yeah, I was a broke ass college student and I still didn’t overdraft my account. It doesn’t matter how poor you are don’t overdraft your account it will make you even more poor, so yeah, the answer is don’t overdraft or you could overdraft and then see what happens
Being poor costs more in so many ways. The additional stress put upon so many people day after day thinking and worrying about how to feed their families and pay the next electric bill, etc leads to mental health problems and effects them physically as well do to lack of proper nutrition.
You're right Nate, people who need money and help the most are the ones who are taken advantage of most often.
Many have inadequate cooking access, rent a room that doesn’t allow cooking. They don’t know how to feed their family inexpensively with good nutrition. Infestations in an apartment building of rats, mice or roaches that gnaw through containers and contaminate food.
For real😊
Being poor is litterally a drawn out death sentence while being tortured the whole way down. Can't afford the $150 to fix your tooth cavity? Guess you'll just have to wait until it hurts more and costs $3,000 for a root canal. Can't afford that? Guess you'll just die of an abscess in pain. Funeral bill to your family - $15,000 to bad you didn't have that initial $150 bucks.
Did my grocery bill just jump 10%? Feels like I'm working harder for the same amount of stuff. Gotta find ways to stretch my budget further or this inflation thing is gonna flatten my wallet.
I hear you. Curbing spending is key. Look for cheaper alternatives, clip coupons, and maybe even consider a side hustle to boost your income. Every bit helps fight inflation's bite.
Firstly, rack your spending, identify areas to cut back, and free up money to weather inflation's storm. A financial consultant can help you analyze your budget and identify areas to cut back without sacrificing your lifestyle.They can also explore ways to boost your income through strategic investments. One client I worked with saw their portfolio grow by 12% last year, allowing them to build a buffer against inflation.
That does make a lot of sense, unlike us, you seem to have the Market figured out. Who is this fiduciary??
“SONYA LEE MITCHELL” is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
I copied her whole name and pasted it into my browser; her website appeared immediately, and her qualifications are excellent; thank you for sharing.
Shop at Aldi, use a credit union, keep track of finances and have a plan. Buy a cheap new car with 0% financing and save. I’ve always been poor but never ignored reality.
The only case where I could see that a poor person has a car is if they bought a car when he was not poor. But usually the poor cannot afford their own car and use public transport instead.
Why do poor people need cars 🧐🧐🧐
well now i can't be poor in peace, good to know
I don't know if you *ever* really could have been
It’s rough out here for us azuki holders
try RIP!
Yes, you can, it’s a state of mind. Many live on very little intentionally.
It's been a rough year with losses from failed banks, real estate crashes, a struggling economy, and downturns in stocks and dividends. It feels like everything has been going wrong.
What a terrible year it is…
I’d point out that if you’re poor then you have to buy cheaper stuff, like clothes, phones, cars, food etc… all of which will cost you more in the long run. Buy cheap clothes and phones multiple times, cars have issues and always in need of repair, food will make your health worse if you’re not wise with it and cost you in life value and monetarily
Dave Ramsey says dont buy NEW cars. And its ok to shop in box shops and 2nd hand stores for clothes to build your wealth.
i disagree with the cars. the real problem is the car loans that kill wealth. i buy cheap clothes they seem to last as long as the expensive stuff and never get the latest and greastest phone as its not finacially wise. i can agree on the food as its bigger % of budget.
In living the poor life in europe but not because i have to but because im trying to live on the bare minimum to afford hoarding silver and stocks this also made me better at handling money this video is worth gold
@@jasoncasey583It is hardly that easy elsewhere either. In Finland, there was just a report that the poor can no longer afford to go to second hand stores, thrift shops and flea markets because the prices have gone up there as well and some customers have started stealing used clothes without paying. And previously, the problem has also been that although women's and children's clothing has always been well available, there has been a shortage of men's clothing.
Insurance. Wealthy can self insure for many things while the poor are stuck with premiums.
Yep. That one was on my list but i forgot to mention it in the video
In these uncertain times, it's more important than ever to have a solid understanding of how to manage your finances, invest wisely and navigate economic downturns. But my primary concern is how to grow my reserve of $240k which has been sitting duck since forever with zero to no gains, sure I'm all in on the long term game, but with my savings are lying waste to inflation and my portfolio losing gains everyday, I need a remedy.
If you need advice, consider speaking with a financial advisor. Don't get me wrong, you can do it on your own, but financial advisors have a lot more knowledge and expertise in this area.
you are completely right, Advisors have information and paths that are not disclosed to the public.. I profited £560k in 2022 under the tutelage of my Fiduciary-counselor. Am I selling? Absolutely not.. I am going to sit back and observe how this all plays out.
That's impressive! I could really use the expertise of this manager for my dwindling portfolio. Who’s the professional guiding you?
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Melissa Terri Swayne” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
Financial information like what is shown on this channel is helping a ton of people in the long run. You do good work here
Thank you!
@@NateOBrien you're welcome
Agreed! He has helped me tremendously over the years.
I really appreciate you using your platform to showcase some of these issues; especially since this doesn't necessarily affect your target demographic.
Other similar ideas that you didn't explore include:
- The extra cost for paying bills monthly instead of annually (such as car insurance) if you can't afford one massive payment.
- Poor folks not having the money up front to buy in bulk to save money in the long run.
- Interest rates being higher for used cars than for new ones.
-Medical issues getting worse and costing more in the end since you couldn't afford to promptly take care of them (i.e., a cavity getting so bad that you now need a root canal and crown. A $200 issue is now a $1200 issue.)
Lack of education for multiple reasons. Higher incidence of being illiterate and having poor math skills. Property taxes that are disproportionate to their income. Little to no financial training. Cashing a paycheck can cost 3% of their pay or more, with little access to banks. It’s estimated that 30+% of Americans don’t have bank accounts.
@@kenyonbissett3512 I have poor math skills, yet am excellent with money.
I appreciate you being empathetic towards the poor even though you are wealthy.
He's using scare tactics to make you continue to watch his tutorials. SCARE TACTICS WORK. I must say his narrative is also very well-organized. He tells you up front that he'll be discussing pitfalls and not solutions, which is really important to know right away. It builds trust with your audience when you're transparent which he is.
@@evelynzlon9492interesting perspective. Ultimately the viewer will interpret a video however it they see fit. As someone that was watched his videos since the beginning I have to respectfully disagree. Nate has mentioned previously that he isn’t huge on being a “social media” influencer. He does a lot of research and simply shares the truth. Most of his knowledge is through books, experience and school. I doubt he cares to “scare you” I feel that is a defensive mentality. Rather take in his advice and use it as fuel to NOT fall victim to the broken economic system and how divisive it can be. He started RUclips at a very young age and quickly became successful by hard work not luck. Just trying to say Nate is worthy of more than just a fear mongering channel.
Very well stated. Thank you 🙏
Shall I not watch his videos then?@@evelynzlon9492
I respect how fair/honest your takes/videos are. It's usually so easy for comfortable people too ignore topics like these.
I appreciate that!
Good compliment to Nate, but you describe him as "comfortable" and I would"nt describe him as "comfortable " because I'm sure he works his tush off for whatever he has!
Business avoid the areas known as food deserts because of crime... its a vicious cycle. People turn to crime because the are desperate... but the same crime they commit hurts them and others like them more.
Yes, not sure on the solution
One of the main things stolen isn't food or neccesities, it's makeup. That isn't always desperation, it's entitlement at that point.
The numerous government programs also keep people poor. If the government is giving you 10K a year if you make below 40K a year and you find a job that makes 45K you are going to stay at your same crappy job because of that free money you get from the government. I know of several people that will purposely look for a low paying job just for collecting money from the government such as food stamps, free medical, rent assistance. All this stuff can easily add to 20K in government assistant. The solution is to get rid of that poor mindset and learn a skill that can give you a healthy paycheck. It is up to the individual not the government to fix this. Government intervention just makes it worse.
Tell that to the crimeless rural communites across the midwest.
My favorite poor person experience was when my ten year old tire exploded and I needed to get a new one. Couldn’t afford to get the others replaced and it messed up the frame. The $800 fix turned into a $2000 fix and I only got to pay it off when I won at a casino. Had to pay taxes on the winnings later
Being poor forces people to think in the short term, rather than being able to think and plan long term
@@NateOBrien: Any correlation between not having money to pay for the $2,000 fix
spending money at the casino?
@@SouLoveReal to be clear I don’t gamble really at all. I had $20 at the end of the month and it was my only option short of getting a loan I had no hope to pay off
Here's my reply to the people that are leaving negative comments like the one above. Don't put people down who are already down. Give them a hand up. If everyone helped someone less fortunate than themselves we wouldn't have poverty.
Living in poverty creates a chain reaction of negative events. Those events pile up very quickly and make life pretty miserable.
@@trickfan2772 tbf I really don’t think he gets it
In Canada, they cracked down on payday loans because of how detrimental to society. They made a law where the loaners can’t charge more than $20 per $100 borrowed, instead of traditional payday loan structures. Many of the payday loan companies now focus on other services like international money transfers, prepaid credit cards, cashing cheques and business services.
Not much of a crackdown. 20% is horrifically predatory.
@@mrollins4684it’s better than 500-700%!!!
Nate, I was doing a return at a Walmart on a Friday night and there were 4 people in a row on front of me paying Walmart to cash their paychecks for them. I couldn’t even believe it!! Financial education needs to start at such a basic level.
This is also why it's important for businesses to continue to accept cash. There seems to be a growing trend amongst businesses to only accept credit cards and refuse cash
@@NateOBrien I know right? It's getting crazy. Even restaurants and little shops now only take apple pay samsung pay etc but not cash
A few banks like Citizens and Capital One don't have a minimum balance incentive
@@crazypvpHowThat's really sad...
yes exactly! you shouldn't need a back account to buy a sandwich@@NateOBrien
I was in an uber , (unusually going through the posh Kensington area of London )and both the driver and I noted that there weren't any fast food outlets there, just dessert /patisserie venues , made us think that fast food places target the more deprived areas . Hadn't seen such a clear distinction until then.
I'm sold! Imma stop being poor.
biggest threat to the poor and lower income is inflation. The expansion of the money supply is an invisible tax on the most vulnerable.
yup exactly. wages don’t keep up with inflation unfortunately. one has to find a higher paying job to keep up with inflation.
@@rubberduckie5518 100%
Great video. Two things I'd like to add:
1. Parking ticket or even government tickets usually have this kind of incentive that if you pay in the first 10 days, you get 20 or 30% off. It take time for low-income people to find money to pay the tickets, so they are the people usually end up paying more.
2. A lot of low-income people don't use credit cards, let along good credit cards that offer cash back or points. So comfortable people can use the points or cash back to somewhat balance out the invisible cost you mentioned, but not those low-income people who pays cash.
Another example: most insurance products charge an installment fee for paying in monthly installments rather than paying the full premium up front.
That’s true, if you even have insurance at all.
@@antwanthorogood4921 I'm kind of assuming most people have auto insurance and renters or homeowners insurance at a minimum.
@@antwanthorogood4921I don't understand at all
thanks Nate, great value... Ill just be eating cheese whiz and bread.
thanks humphrey
If you can find a place to live for cheap where you don’t need a car, suddenly you have the freedom to save much more money. Used and new Cars are one of America’s biggest wealth killers.
Did your leftist professor tell you that?
Buying a home. If you don't have have enough to put a 20% down payment on a home mortgage, you have to pay the PMI (private mortgage insurance) on top of your principal, interest, and escrow(if you're doing this). You literally pay more for having less money because they don't believe you can pay off a mortgage.
I don't consider myself poor and I did put down 5%..paid $80 PMI for $300k loan and then eliminated it a year later. It still was cheaper than renting an apartment. This year there was a law that low credit score holders get better rate than those with higher ones. I think PMI in this case will be covered by lower % rate for "poor"
@@gulkinna I believe it was still cheaper than renting an apartment. How much total in PMI did you pay in that first year until you eliminated it?
Haven't heard of the low credit score/better rate law. Is that federal or local to you? Good to know.
I mean, lenders need to protect themselves somehow. You can't just have everyone getting a loan that can't afford it for whatever reason and then they can't make their payments. As much as it sucks and is costly it makes sense. How would you protect yourself if you were the lender?
@@tianamarie989 Very true. The alternative could be to deny a loan. If they can't afford it, adding interest won't make it easier.
The thing about food deserts is so spot on, Walmart has more affordable things like bread, and milk but when you go to a dollar store it is much more expensive even though stuff is supposed to be "cheaper" but Walmart isn't in walking distance but the dollar stores always are.
It’s convince and Walmart can afford to be cheaper 😂
Target 🎯 is actually cheaper than Walmart if you use the red card and have Target Circle ⭕️
I worked 5 years as a manager of a dollar general in general the food was competative and cheapest beer in town however home cleaning stuff etc medicines were priced pretty high those stores make more profit than you would ever imagine
@@jasonleatherwood2172 the profit margin these dollar stores 🏬 make are absolutely ridiculous and come from hardworking people who are honest and don’t steal hence the majority of humans.
Very important issue!! Thank you Nate! I'd like to mention education here. The poor often drop out of school to get a job to help their parents and has low or no access to higher education, they can only get into low paid jobs which keep them poor. While the rich get higher education, then get into high paid jobs and get richer
Some kid's in poverty can't get a legal job because if their parents are on social assistance that income is counted towards their household allowance and the family loses assistance.
I tried to save money by buying a cheap umbrella once... Ended up buying five in one month! 😅
WOW! POINT ON! What a great video that definitely needs to be addressed so thank you for being the person to speak on this subject matter. But WOW as I'm listening my mind and thoughts are all over the place of what I want to say, but I will keep or contain myself from posting political comments , very reason why I left Facebook ( well a lot of reasons why I left Facebook LOL) But you are right how being poor costs more. I know, I am age 58 , my income is Social Security Income , I only receive the yearly COLA increase, it helps but not enough . But I know there are many millions of Americans who are poor , live in rural areas and getting around is costly as far as transportation. For me I have had to give up a lot in my life seeing I live on a limited income. I did watch a video you posted I think about a year ago on how to spend $30 a week for groceries. That's me, I have a budget of $120 per month for food , I have had to cut out a lot of food options and choices. But I still consider myself fortunate, I am in a shared living situation with a friend , we share expenses and that makes it doable to live life a little , fortunately we both love nature so most of our entertainment is "outdoor" once a month we are able to dine out, and once or twice a year we are able to travel but only with in the United States. Any traveling aboard is not an option for us. The solution ? There's probably a million ways to address that, I lived most of my life in financial ruins and I worked , but no job stability , moving from place to place in the last 10 years took a huge financial loss, I have learned the hard way (and believe me it wasn't pretty) . My life is more stable now and a bit more financially stable, we learn from our mistakes especially when it comes to money. People do need to be educated about their spending, whether it be a financial consultant , make some courses , I like to believe there is always a way . But as far as food, food prices are taking a toll on all of us, I know, I have cut out so much food , but in a good way, no snacks, no processed foods, no pastries, or what ever junk food there is. I am also a Certified Health Coach , I specialize in nutrition for healthier eating. So it's a good thing that I cut out the "junk" and add in the "healthy foods" But I also know it's not as easy for those who have nutriition insecurity, this is a real thing here in the United States and these issues do need to be addressed. Every one has the right to healthy and sustainable food , a home , proper transportation etc.
100% agree,
It does cost to be poor.
Man I really expected you to cover the Dollar store "tax". It's best exemplified there, you can go get a dollar store specific size of laundry detergent, because all you have is the $5. The problem is you're paying way more per ounce of detergent than you'd pay if you could afford the $50 at Costco for the gallons size. Bulk purchasing in general is a huge thing with that but I think the laundry detergent is the best example you can use.
Thanks for posting this video Nate. I think a lot of folks who are well off won't even listen to points like the ones you make here. They've already decided with little to no real evidence or experience that being poor is a choice. They just continue existing in their ignorant comfortable bubble. I also don't know the answers but it at least starts with everyone recognizing the problems you described here.
Decades ago, being poor was typically more "optional" than it is now. These days it's a lot harder to fundamentally improve your standard of living no matter how hard you work. The housing costs-to-income ratio is much higher than it was historically, and the cost of a college education has skyrocketed so student loans consume a much larger proportion of your income. The most reliable way to break into a higher class bracket is usually through lucrative blue collar jobs. Certain truck drivers earn a great deal of money, for example. However these drivers usually transport hazardous materials AND they're still held in low esteem by educated professionals. There's a price to pay for upward mobility, one way or another. America is actually becoming more like England whose rigid class system was hard to crack.
@@evelynzlon9492. F what thise so called "educated" people think about the job you do If you are making money.Especially more than them. Most those people are in debt up their arses and are just in an extended downfall themselves.
@@fugoogle5345 I have a B.A. in Economics but my academic performance was marred by apathy so I'm not actually competitive for related careers. However I think people can SENSE your course of study. Most people just ignore me on the street, but guys wearing business suits are usually cordial even if I'm wearing street clothes and a doo-rag and have nothing apparently in common with them. Isn't that weird?
@@fugoogle5345 My initials are also E.Z. So my collegiate apathy in my conservative major was largely born of despair. DO YOU UNDERSTAND ME? I once tried out to become a fashion model which includes illustrious success stories like Duckie Thot. However I lack the self-discipline to become anorexic. Now if you consider Nate's surname 2 different words contracted by an apostrophe, his initials are NOB. And he was a millionaire barely out of diapers. Isn't THAT something?
@@fugoogle5345 I also had a stint as a professional psychic. I had a low accuracy rate by industry standards, but when I AM right, I'm right to a T. Or an R, which is my guess for Nate's middle initial.
If you ever get an overdraft fee or even a late payment fee you can call and ask them to forgive it. Typically they will, especially if it's your first time.
It’s like a domino effect .. get @$$ kicked once and it keeps going …
Right! Overdraft fees are like getting kicked while you are down...
@@moneycessity the other day my chase credit card went over the limit .. I was busy but ended up paying within a couple of days .. but that was enough to drop 35 points on the FICO score 🙄
As somebody who grew up in this type of environment, I can tell you one thing, there are tons of things that make it worse very for starters, sound financial management is not only not taught, Your tattoo avoid looking into that which further adds to the type of mindset that keeps you there. People are not to be resourceful and think from a scarcity mindset. That's something my parents instill than me and undoing that was extremely difficult. We weren't just poor. We were taught to stay poor and think poor
Who teaches you to avoid looking into financial education
@@AnimeErudite
Who’s to say they did? They are watching this video which does teaches something. Also, I just assumed based off of the comment saying “grew up in this type of environment,” that they were referencing when they were a kid and didn’t really have any financial control, so financial education may not have been as useful to them until they were old enough to work.
They also used the past tense “were” in “We were taught to stay poor and think poor,” which to me implied this all happened in the past and may be better now. I can’t help but feel your comment is just a dig at their past which they didn’t choose, not an actual constructive question, as no one “teaches you to avoid looking into financial education,” lmao
@user-sf9gs2pg1b bro relax I was just asking a question
Price for soda is insane! Why would anybody drink it when it's so expensive and also bad for your health? Actuality, it makes be taxed you double: at the time you bought it and when you get medical bills to pay after what you've done with your body
Its some of the cheapest ready to drink drinks besides water and we are conditioned to want it from an early age with all of the advertising and how convenient soda is in fountain machines at food places and gas stations.
@@GrandpaBaner that sounds like an excuse...
@@tianamarie989 it's a reason not an excuse. If you see people forming bad habits then it's good to see why they form in people.
Financial advice from nate is always the best on youtube
debt is slavery.. pure and simple man
It is really sad 😔 that it costs so much more to be poor especially in food 🥘 deserts 🌵
I once tried explaining a food desert to someone who lived an upper middle class lifestyle and I might as well be speaking to her in another language.
What do you mean with food desert?
@wendytestaburger8321 food deserts exist in areas where there is little to no real food(fresh fruit/veggies meats) or even grocery stores within a community or within a reasonable distance.
@@tianamarie989 so theres only sweet stuff? Or why the name
@@wendytestaburger8321desert is the dry place where there is little food or water. Dessert, with two S, is the sweet you eat after diner.
Thx again Nate! Fees and taxes are out of control!
Payday loans, and “dollar” stores are predatory to the point of just being evil.
Great perspective Nate and well done. My heart is with the people who just want to get by and live their lives in these food deserts. I also can't blame large stores who won't go into these places or pull out there existing stores due to various "reasons".
One woman, when she retired, in a medium sized city wanted to make a difference. She opened a very small grocery store. It was all generic, no name food, frozen meat kept behind the counter, cheese and dairy in a clear refrigerator next to the meat case. Fresh fruits and vegetables were available. Most food was kept in the back and restocked as sold. She kept prices low by having volunteer workers and being a non-profit. The store was small so only allowed about 10-12 shoppers at one time. This also allowed her to know her customers and them to know her. No candy, cookies, soda, bakery beyond sandwich breads.
@@kenyonbissett35126:44
Life expectancy is a huge one you missed. Great vid!
In Canada, recently vendors have been given the right to charge credit card fees to the clients using them. On a large purchases paying cash, cheque or debit can essentially be a discount. This was legislated because the credit card companies forbid cash discounts in the vendor agreements. About time.
Yep. I live in a small town in Minneapolis. It is really common for all local businesses to charge a 3% fee for non-cash purchases to cover the processing fees. It’s kind of annoying because I prefer to earn points with a credit card, but I admit it is more fair for me to pay the fees than in being past on to someone who may be more poor than me.
I have three answers for people who are having trouble with parking tickets, bicycle E bike or small motorcycle especially the bike and regular bicycle. You don’t have to register them so you should not be able to get a parking ticket plus bring it in your house there you go nobody can put a ticket on if it’s in your living room.
Good point. My local goodwill has had bikes for 10 bucks this year.
Such an important topic - thanks so much for sharing Nate. It's so true - it definitely costs more to be poor.
* Rent-to-own appliances.
* High utility deposits due to credit scores.
*Higher car and home insurance for the same reason.
*High rental deposits because of past evictions (and bad credit).
* High interest at the "buy here, pay here" car lot.
I'm sure there are more. There is a long list.
I’d like to point out for anyone who didn’t know, the government considers 29k annual NET income per person as the poverty line now. So it’s getting out of hand when most jobs pay around or less than that
I was just thinking about some of these topics when my vehicle registration renewal arrived in the mail. $100 or so in property tax and other flat fees when just registering a car can take a bigger chunk out of lower income individuals paychecks than higher earners who won't even notice it.
You have an youtube channel with 1,31 millons followers. Pretty impressive. Don´t know why poor pleople are poor? Let me tell you. It´s not that poor people work less than rich people. No, as a matter of fact some of them even work more. Much more. They even have several jobs in the Unated States or have jobs with long hours in the rest of the world. They lift heavy things and work under poor conditions. Poor people are poor because ¨They think differently from rich people¨. That´s the reason. They see everything in terms of scarity instad of abundance. That´s why. People who either were born in a wealthy family or made their way up to the top, think complete different from poor people. They see opportunities where poor people see obstacles, they see money almost everywhere, where poor people as you said ¨live from paycheck to paycheck¨. It´s a matter of mindset. They have a minset of scarity. That´s why. Hope it has been usefull. Love. Good luck with your channel.
Whenever I have less money than I planned to have or I want to save a bit more, a part from budgeting and trying to stick to it I get what I am going to use out of the bank and I have it in cash, I personally find it easier to lower my expending with cash in hand. Besides, in Spain they don’t really give us a lot of incentives for using the bank (they do using Revolut for example but I don’t want to pay monthly to a bank I mean, they are already using my money, what else do they want?! 😂😂😂)
Please try to upload videos more often 🙏🏼
Costco can be crazy with its deals sometimes.
can't beat that $5 chicken
My bank account overdraft me 200 if I remember correctly just to move my savings to checkings. It’s absolutely ridiculous
Thank you for the video. I live in low income apartments and have been denied disability. I earn less than 7000 a year working for my well to do family. They are benefitted in so many ways that people like myself are not. They're friends who are also upper class are even wealthy give then things frequently such as furniture, food, gift cards, concert tickets, tickets to sporting events, free admission somewhere, discounts at places they work are even own such as restaurants, dry cleaners, car dealerships, real estate companies, gyms, theaters etc. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer or you could say it's all in who you do or don't know. I see this type of thing on the daily and am just grateful that I am connected so I benefit a small amount compared to many in my financial bracket such as my neighbors.
Im german and from europe what exactly is disability?
@@wendytestaburger8321Disability in the United States is usually SSDI or SSI. The individual has to prove to the Social Security Administration that they are truly disabled and most people have great difficulty doing that. We have lawyers here to help fight for disability but even then getting it is hard. If a disabled person gets approved for disability payments it's almost always a low payment that prevents the disabled person from being able to live normally. For example, $1483 is the average SSDI monthly payment to a disabled person but I know many living on a lot less than that who can't work and are about to face homelessness. The system over here in the United States for the disabled is really sad.
On the overdraft fees or bounced checks, sometimes a person will deposit a check thinking the check has gone through, but it's either denied or delayed. So, people spend money when they actually don't have any. Then, depending on how the bank deals with this, there may be multiple overdrafts, each with their own fees or bounced checks, leading to a cascade of problems.
Yup,
I worked for a business that was all cash. They had an ATM in the premises. At average, they made 10,000. Per month. A credit card company convinced them they would make more revenue if they offered credit card payments. Now the pay in fees 30,000. and up per month. And of course they had to raise their prices. 😢
Nothing But The Truth
In my country we have higher cashback for debit cards. And smaller for credit cards.
Also, car dealership commercials. I always hear them say: BAD OR NO CREDIT? YOURE APPROVED! NO DOWN PAYMENT? NO PROBLEM! What they are hiding is that that person will be tried down to high monthly car payments for a long time! I hate it!
Why do people even need a their own cars used bus taxi or walking
Really appreciate your down to earth perspective on things. One of my favourite RUclips channels.
Graduate from high school, get a job, don't be an addict, and postpone having children until after marriage.
Excuses are like buttholes. Everybody has one, and most of them stink.
I think you shouldn't've share your interest in sniffing people's butthole.
I’m by no means rich, but I used to be barely scraping by. One thing I can add is when you get paid weekly, it’s really hard to budget a month ahead unless you’ve already established an emergency account. When I was broke that was a laughable concept on it’s own.
The opposite is true for me. I miss weekly paychecks, and it was really difficult for a long time to get used to biweekly checks.
Being content, and knowing how to cook, clean, and fix a few things make the difference. Actually the only way for most low income to survive with dignity.
Being poor cost more. You can’t afford to go to the Denist. Can’t afford to eat healthy, can’t afford to go to the Doctor. Bank makes you more broke charging NSF Fees. Bad credit makes you have higher interest rates making you more poor.
I just don't understand why people wouldn't drink water - I guess maybe if you're in poverty you can't afford a place with drinkable water - but isn't water less expensive than soft drinks?
Water 💧 is always free
The solution to credit card fees would be a cap fees by law putting a price cap for merchants at 1% plus a 5 cent fee per transaction. Credit card processing fees are an essential service for businesses and visa and master card know it and charge 3% plus 30 cents and that cost is a top 3 cost for most businesses.
This is an important issue. Great you are using your platform to highlight it.
Another huge thing is the amount of poor people who have to live on disability. If you are disabled, you’re unable to work and receive healthcare through your job. If you make more than a certain amount (a very low threshold) then your medications and hospital visits will no longer be covered. People have to stay poor and continue struggling because their conditions (type 1 diabetes, MS, etc) require necessary medical care. It’s a hot mess.
I find it interesting how you said you don't want to get political - but money is very political and we shouldn't stray away from that.
The wages low-income people make is political.
The healthcare we pay for is political.
The rent we pay is political.
Thanks for shedding light on this topic.
I think my point is that I would rather highlight the problems instead of trying to propose solutions
@@NateOBrien totally get you and appreciative of you bringing awareness to this subject either way!
Lottery tickets and taxes on cigarettes have a big impact on lower income people.
Here in the UK some banks offer accounts with no overdraft feature, so if you try making a payment with a debit card for say £10.00 but you only have £9.50, either the payment gets declined or the merchant will try taking it and the amount bounces back. My solution to credit card fees is just don't have a credit card. You'really borrowing the money from the card company, so clearly you can't afford the thing you just bought on credit, because you pay that ammount plus any interest fees every month or however often it is.
insurance is a big one. You can pay double from just going monthly. end up more than a lot of peoples insurance. not to mention insurance is even effected from things that don't play into insurance. for example car insurance can be more expensive for getting a ticket going 8mph over, while statistically someone going 5-10mph under causes more axidents.
Infact the whole transportation system is abusive towards poor people. The only way to have an advantage in it is by being fluent in cars. ie knowing whats reliable, cheap to repair, some repairs at home, etc. Most people opt in for the less knollegable option of buying a new car and paying more upfront, to avoid thinking of repairs. my car has 203k miles and I've only had to take it to the shop once, only time the CEL came on for a bad coolent line, which I've been topping off regularly up to that point.
As a person with money and good credit the advantages for me are(not being sarcastic or brag btw): free Credit card points(free money) for spending money. 10% cash back in my gasoline and grocery. Buy in bulk and on sale to save money and store in my bigger house. Work from home to save gas and money and doing laundry and chores while at home. Able to pay more for a Toyota to avoid car issues. Tax advantage account and amazing growth on investments growing potentially tax free. My living expenses is very small compared to my income and net worth. I was raised poor and still live with a very frugal mentality.
My mom used to complain about this as a single mom in the 90’s because she couldn’t afford to buy in bulk from places like the big-box stores
Here’s one for you. Costco does a thing where you buy like $150 worth of certain type of grocery and get $50 back. I think the last one was cleaners. Laundry soap, dish soap and such. Poor people can’t participate.
So stores should stop offering those deals?
Tax are the buggiest problem. I have no problem paying tax on my pay check but it’s ridiculous when you have to pay tax too when you buy a bottle of water. And they will tax Reaturant and now Reaturant have a to raised a price they have on their menu and then tax you again. I feel like tax on food are keep getting worse as time go by
It's mainly from theft.
Lived in poverty. Dont use your checking account as a credit card. If you dont have a bank account, you wouldn't have the option to overdraw. The biggest problem is banks require $500 or more in the account or they charge a fee. So many have to go to check cashing places that rob a large %
My 4 local banks that I use don't have minimums this high. What bank are you talking about?
Two cents did a great video on this too. Thanks for highlighting this.
Those first 2 + parking tickets really called me out for being so poor a few years ago lmaooo ;-;
I m a bharat vasi (Indian),.I keep playback speed 0.75 to understand your videos. 😊😊
Same here
Might try 0.74 speed😂
I didn’t know that about the credit card, that stores will raise prices because they have to pay for people to use the card. Interesting
I live in a food desert, which is in the ghetto right across the street from a homeless shelter. That is so disgusting for these greedy people to do that to others. But nobody changes things or gets a sense of morals.
It sucks to live in the edge. I did live in relative poverty for a while, but our family always helped so we never had huge issues. Today, I work and provide for myself, and even invest. But yes, it costs more to be more poor... this is especially true if you rely on a car go get a job.
3:29 - ...AND this was back when $15 billion was a lot of money, kids!!
Nobody seems to talk about how lower paying jobs don't have contracts usually. I have zeros two years in the middle of my working career in my ss statement. Did I not work? Ofcourse I did. Employer chose not to pay us at all. It was just customers who did. We also didn't get paid for training. There was no break during the twelve hour shit and I ended up in ER few times. I was not in a position to question or argue any of it back then. The ones who were, got fired.
I barely made minimum wage working and my boss chose not to pay the 2.77 an hour for two years. He went on to open a second restaurant with all the money he saved. This wasn't the only place that didn't pay. Some didn't even give you all the money customer's left. Two jobs cost me more to go to work that to stay home. While they paid with check, they didn't make it up to the minimum wage.
Thank you for talking about this. Redlining is not just for residential real estate. It also applies to business real estate. Businesses in poor areas have higher insurance because of an increase in violence in these poor areas, so the big chains won't invest in those areas. Hence, the small stores who charge higher prices.
Wow, your channel has grown a lot, good for you, you deserve it!
Payday Loans = Legal Loansharking
Also being someone who is in the 'Extreme Poverty' level, I will say that there is no such thing as the 'trickle down' effect; The 'trickle up' effect, is 100% in effect everywhere though. The rich get richer, the poor get poorer. And those that are in power, have no intention of changing it, as those in power ARE the problem.
I’ve been there and I cut back my meals and ate at friend’s houses. I would walk everywhere even if it took me a hr to get there so my gas would last longer. I shopped at the $1 store. I would repeatedly return to exchange clothes so I wouldn’t have to wear worn clothes or spend more money for new ones. 90day return policy was the best. I brought a pack of cigarettes and stood at a bus stop in the middle of nowhere and sold them for a $1 sometimes 2 each. Being poor often means you have to be strategic in ways to make and save money.
that's called living in hell. what a NIGHTMARE.
@@tropicallyfit Well coming from where I’ve been it is a privilege to be American. Cause there are people who will have far less their entire lives.
Can you go something on effective time management and goal setting please...
The price increase due to benefits is so tricky. Because you feel like your getting money but in reality your just paying as much as you would if credit companies didn't exist.
Always good info👍🏴
Also, renting an apartment or a house has spiked significantly! Great information Nate.
What very often causes food deserts are that the stores are getting robbed blind. Of course the stores will close and leave under those circumstances. But nobody wants to talk about that or crack down on the shoplifting.
How about extra costs when you need to finance consumer items like furniture and appliances. Phone carriers and car insurance often give a big discount for pre paying in full. Also you can get discounts for putting bills on autopay. Wholesale clubs offer a significant discount oftentimes but you have to have the $60 for a membership and then be able to pay more upfront for large quantities of groceries.
The poor don't pay 1.5% to 3% extra on their groceries, so they are not flipping the bill. The merchant is choosing to take that loss for ease of transaction, less money being handled by
Employees. Merchants could offer a 1.5% to 3% off if cash is spent.
I tried the dollar tree once but quickly noticed that the price per ounce on food was higher than Walmart. So I just use Walmart. I search for a bank with free checking, I am not paying for checking since they get money every time I use my debit card. If you replace the word poor with stupid, you begin to really see the problem. Stupid complains about being poor not being stupid.
@NateOBrienDirectMessage This doesn’t tell me how or if this is a scam.
You just pissed off a bunch of people with a victim mindset but not me. This motivates me to hurry up and stop being poor. I would love for intelligent, creative and thoughtful people such as you and your brother and dozens of others to be in the same room to help come up with clever and effective solutions to the wealth inequality thing… I love capitalism but in my opinion no one should have more than one billion dollars in net worth. The rest of their earnings should go towards addressing food deserts and dozens of other problems. Credit cards and predatory loans should be banned. Capitalism runs through my blood but you get to a certain point where you realize we have allowed these corporations to run rampant, they don’t have our best interest at heart. I’m in favor of ethical capitalism with a hint of socialism. As soon as I get rich, I’m gonna use my money to reshape our antiquated systems. Nate, this was a great video idea, super creative! Thanks for the insight / reminder, I gotta get back to work!! ✌️😎 y’all have a fruitful and blessed day!!!
So you're advocating for a cap on earnings for store owners and directing them on how to spend their "extra"? You my friend want capitalism for your self and socialism/communism for high earners.
Can't have it both ways.
OK I like the comment where you were like. Oh people just say don’t overdraft and then you were like well they probably have an experience poverty. Yeah, I was a broke ass college student and I still didn’t overdraft my account. It doesn’t matter how poor you are don’t overdraft your account it will make you even more poor, so yeah, the answer is don’t overdraft or you could overdraft and then see what happens
Carbon Tax in Canada a huge regressive tax... Doesn't matter if you're rich or poor, we all have to heat our homes with natural gas in the winter
Yep exactly