{"id":132032,"date":"2012-05-10T05:00:55","date_gmt":"2012-05-10T12:00:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/getrichslowly.org\/blog\/?p=132032"},"modified":"2023-10-02T16:20:48","modified_gmt":"2023-10-02T22:20:48","slug":"classifying-wants-and-needs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.getrichslowly.org\/classifying-wants-and-needs\/","title":{"rendered":"Classifying wants and needs"},"content":{"rendered":"

We all have our ways of destressing after a long day. One of my weirdest and most beloved post-work, take-a-load-off strategies has always been cruising the aisles of gourmet grocery stores just to look at packaging. Give me an aisle of fancily bottled extra virgin olive oil, and I’ll need at least an hour. Nothing is more calming to me than fancy fonts on fancy jars of fancy imported foods.<\/p>\n

I don’t even need to buy anything. Often I just stroll around, try a sample of pickled figs, and continue my stroll home. Sometimes though, I’ll splurge on a $3 glass bottle of spring water from some promised fountain-of-youth in Italy. This, to me, is the quintessential quandary of wants vs. needs: I need to drink water, but I don’t need it to come from a hydro-spa in Lurisia.<\/p>\n

<\/span>What’s a Want? What’s a Need?<\/span><\/h2>\n

There were a lot of comments in my last article about spontaneous spending as to how to determine wants and needs when budgeting according to the Balanced Money Formula<\/a> in Warren and Tyagi’s All Your Worth<\/a>.<\/span> Whether you use their formula or not, figuring out the essentials of your budget is important. For those of you just tuning in, the balanced money formula says that 50% of your income should go toward needs, 30% to wants, and 20% into savings. I think this comment exemplifies some of the confusion:<\/p>\n

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\nThe discussion went on to include a lot of grey areas:<\/p>\n