Motley Fool Money - Why You Make Bad Decisions About Money

Episode Date: September 1, 2020

Ok, it’s not just you. It’s all of us. Why do human beings tend to make bad decisions when it comes to spending money? According to Dan Ariely, best-selling author and professor of psychology and ...behavioral economics, a lot of it comes down to the environment we face as consumers.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you're a small business owner, you already know what it takes to keep everything moving. You're juggling customers, invoices, and about 100 decisions every day. Thankfully, taxes don't have to be one more thing on that list. With Intuit TurboTax, you can get your business taxes done for you with a full service expert. TurboTax matches you with your dedicated tax expert. Who knows your industry understands your business write-offs and gives you the personalized advice your business deserves. upload your documents right in the app, hand everything off, and still feel like you're in the loop the whole way through. You can even get real-time updates on your expert's progress right in the
Starting point is 00:00:42 app, which makes it so much easier to stay on track. And you can get unlimited expert help at no extra cost, even on nights and weekends during tax season. Visit turbotax.com to get matched with an expert today, only available with TurboTax full service experts. With the Motleyville Money Extra, I'm Chris Hill. Spending a lot of time thinking about money would be fine if it led to better decisions, but generally it doesn't. So why do we make bad decisions with money? Dan Ariely is a professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University.
Starting point is 00:01:25 He's also the author of several best-selling books, including dollars and cents, how we missthink money and how to spend smarter. According to Ariely, a lot of our bad decision making is fueled by the environment of our spending. So there are mainly kind of two types of ways in which we are bad. The first one is that money is all about opportunity costs, right? Every time you spend $5 on a cup of coffee, you should be thinking to yourself, what else wouldn't I be able to buy if I spend $5 on a cup of coffee? But the reality is it's really hard to think about.
Starting point is 00:02:01 Just think to yourself, when was the last? time you thought about opportunity cost. You know, money is a wonderful thing. And being about opportunity cost is part of the wonderful thing that money is, but it also means it's really, really hard to think about money. So that's the first problem. Money is all about opportunity cost, but it's hard to think about opportunity cost. The second thing is that many of our decisions are about now versus later.
Starting point is 00:02:26 And when it comes to now versus later, we often make bad decisions. And this includes decisions about overeating and under-exercising and texting and driving, and you name it. So what happened is that we're just not designed to think about money the right way. And then maybe the final thing is that the environment around us doesn't necessarily wants us to think carefully about money. The environment around us often wants us to spend without thinking. So there's something called the pain of pain. And the pain of paying is the idea that when we pay with cash, we feel bad and we don't spend as much.
Starting point is 00:03:08 When we pay with a credit card or Apple Pay or Android pay, we don't feel as bad and we're likely to spend more. And if you think about where the payment industry is going, it's going in the direction of getting us to spend more, thinking less, and therefore saving less. All of those things together mean that it's really, really hard to think about money the right way, and the environment mostly doesn't help us. We talk a lot on this show about the war on cash.
Starting point is 00:03:36 It's been a rewarding trend for investors, but it might also have a downside for us as consumers. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you next time.

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