Please don't dabble in doom spending The term, which first bubbled up on P lowing a recent survey by Intuit's Credit Karma. Consider it 2024's sequel to last year's "girl math." If girl math was a lighthearted buddy comedy, doom spending is a horror film.
It's not the same as retail therapy-shopping to ease personal woes like a breakup or a bad day at work. Doom spending is "spending money despite concerns about the economy and foreign affairs to cope with stress," says Credit Karma, a credittracking company, and about 27% of Americans say they're doing it.
Self-reported rates of doom spending are higher among men; according to the survey, 33% of men admit to doing it compared with 21% of women. It's the women I'm more worried about, because they already typically face a tougher road to financial independence. They earn, save and invest less, and have more student debt.
The survey finds that young women are much more likely to doom spend than their mothers and older sisters. Throw in the financial precarity dogging millennials and Gen Z-the New York Fed noted that rising credit card and auto loan delinquencies were especially pronounced among younger borrowers and you have a recipe for misery.
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Denne historien er fra February 12, 2024-utgaven av Mint Mumbai.
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