The Frugal Explorer

July 14, 2004

Frugal:  characterized by or reflecting economy in the expenditure of resources.

 

Stingy:  not generous or liberal; sparing or scant in giving or spending; meanly scanty or small.

 

As these definitions from Webster's Dictionary show, frugal isn't stingy. Frugal is good. Stingy is bad. Why, then, do so many high-achievers act as if frugality is a crime?

 

We saw the answer, or at least part of it, in the last ezine. Spending reflects a deep-seated human drive. It is a form of display by which we show the world, or at least our peer group, that we are successful, and therefore worthy of respect.

 

But can we safely assume that those who display wealth are wealthy? No. Trappings are in fact a lousy indicator of wealth. As Thomas Stanley and William Danko show in The Millionaire Next Door, most millionaires defy the Hollywood stereotype. They don't wear expensive shoes, they don't sport expensive watches, they don't drive expensive cars or live in expensive homes. They are, Stanley and Danko write, profiled by three wordsFRUGAL FRUGAL FRUGAL.