Why Isn’t Credit Card Math Taught in School?

Today, I checked my credit card statement and found out that I have to pay $191.13 by October 10, 2019. The box at the bottom informed me that if I were to make the minimum payment ($10) at my current interest rate, then I would pay off my balance in 2 years and 0 months.

WTF?!??! At $10 per month, it would take me 24 months to pay off $191.13. So, I’d be paying $48.87 (= $240-$191.13) in interest over 2 years. The interest of $48.87 is 26% of the outstanding balance of $191.13. Ridiculous!

I also have to remember that if I make any other purchase during that two year period, then the amount owing would go up. that would mean that my bank would charge me even more interest.

So why isn’t credit card math taught in school?

I remember learning how to add, subtract, multiply, and divide. There were lessons on algorithms, on calculus, on algebra. My teachers spent time on the subject of simple interest, compound interest, and how they differed. I very definitely recall word problems involving distance and time.

Yet at no point during my many, many years of schooling do I remember any lessons on how to calculate credit card interest. Sure – I know that if I don’t pay my bill then I’ll be charged 19.97% annually. But is that compounded monthly or annually on my outstanding balance? Does that rate apply to any fees that I might have to pay if I miss a payment?

Math lessons would have been that much more useful to my adult life if I’d been required to solve the following math problem:

Henry indulged in some retail therapy and charged $7500 to his credit card. If he only pays back the minimum monthly payment of $225*** while being charged a rate of 29.99% annually, then how long will it take Henry to repay his credit card? Secondly, how much interest will Henry pay on that credit card debt? *** The minimum monthly payment is equivalent to 3% of the outstanding balance.

Not My Parents’ Fault

I’m not going to blame my parents for this gap in my education. I’m fairly certain that credit cards weren’t a thing when they were in school. You can’t teach what you don’t know.

Credit card math was never an issue in my house when I was growing up. My parents had two credit cards between them. My dad had a gas card that he used when we took our annual summer holiday. My mom had a retail store card that was used to buy appliances for the house. What they taught me about credit cards is as follows: NEVER CARRY A BALANCE.

Full stop. This is what I learned from my parents’ example respecting the issue of credit cards. This is a basic lesson that pretty much works in all situations involving a credit card balance. Pay your credit card balance in full every single month.

Unfortunately, my parents’ example failed to explain how credit card interest will be calculated for those unfortunate folks who do not pay their balances in full each and every single month. Though incredibly useful and entirely admirable, the lesson from my parents taught me nothing about credit card math.

Surely the Credit Card Websites Have the Answers I Need

Let’s recap. My parents didn’t teach me credit card math at home. My schools didn’t teach me credit card math even though I was in their care and custody from the ages of 6 to 17. Despite receiving my undergraduate degree from the school of business, I never learned how credit card interest was calculated. For that matter, my business degree was also useless in teaching me about the nefarious death-grip of student loans or anything else related to personal finance.

The next logical place to search for answers is from the source. Surely the banks who issue credit cards would have a calculator dedicated to credit card math on their website. It would seem only logical that they would have some kind of online tool that explicitly shows how interest on credit cards is calculated and compounded. Customers would be able to enter their outstanding balance and the interest rate on the card then press a button to get a number representing how much interest would be owing on the outstanding debt.

CIBC offers a credit card calculator to encourage you to accumulate points. There’s not a single mention of how the interest is calculated if you don’t pay your bill in full. To be fair, the inquiry “How is interest calculated on my purchases?” results in a link to the cardholder agreement. Pages 6-7 of CIBC’s cardholder agreement set out how payments are applied to a credit card balance. Yet, there’s no calculator that allows borrowers to plug in their own numbers to see just how much interest they will pay if they don’t pay their balance in full.

I’m not picking on CIBC. I went to Scotiabank’s website too, and they didn’t have a credit card interest calculator either. Similarly, TD’s website was a bust. BMO has a variety of calculators for mortgages and savings, but does not offer any online calculators to help their customers figure out how interest is calculated on credit cards.

Maybe Canada’s biggest bank has what I want… RBC’s website isn’t perfect but atleast it offers an explanation, but not a calculator, of how interest is charged on its credit cards. Kudos to RBC for not making its customers wade through a cardholder agreement!

How disappointing… It’s almost as though the purveyors of credit cards do not want their customers to be able to figure out how much interest they will have to pay on their credit card debt if balances aren’t paid in full. I’m willing to go out on a limb here. I believe that credit card issuers don’t want their customers to understand credit card math.

Even the Gurus Can’t Answer my Questions!

If you’re not yet familiar with his teachings, then allow me to indulge for a moment. Dave Ramsey has created a series of Baby Steps to help regular people get out of debt and to achieve wealth. To be clear, I love the lessons about how to get out of debt by creating a debt snowball. If you’re ready to commit to a get-out-of-debt-plan, then start doing what Dave Ramsey says and keep doing it until all of your debt is gone.

Yet, even Dave Ramsey fails to explain how credit card interest is calculated. This is hardly surprising. He hates debt and he encourages people to never carry credit cards. Still, he’s been in the business of helping get out of debt for nearly 3 decades. I thought that maybe, just maybe, he would be the one to explain credit card math to folks…even if just to tell people that they’re stupid for partaking of it.

Government of Canada to the Rescue!

The good folks at the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada have a partial solution. Their website offers a credit card payment calculator that will tell you how much interest will be charged if you don’t pay your credit card off in full. The calculator lets you add in your current balance and your interest rate. The search results ably demonstrate the impact of paying more than the minimum monthly balance and how much interest can be saved.

So far, this is the best credit card math tool that I’ve found online.

I’m still in the dark about how to calculate interest on my credit card balance. So I will resort to my parents’ wisdom. I resolve to never carry a balance. The mystery of credit card math may or may not haunt me for the rest of my days, and that might be okay.

So long as I pay off my credit card balance every single month, I’ll never need to worry about the box at the bottom of my statement which tells me that it will take 24 months of my life to pay off an amount as small as $191.13 if I make the minimum monthly payment while never charging anything else during that time period.

Money Mistake – Not Buying Equities

I think I’ve made a money mistake.

According to the personal finance blogs that I follow, the stock market has been on a bull-run since 2009. A “bullish” stock market is one where the stock market is rising. A “bearish” stock market is one where the stock market is falling.

Since 2011, I’ve been busily building my army of little money soldiers and I’ve been rewarded with nice, plump dividend payments every month. I don’t use those dividends for living expenses – instead, they’re automatically re-invested into buying more dividend-producing assets. I’m proud to say that I’ve created a lovely cash-flowing side income for myself that will supplement my other retirement income when the time comes.

After hearing about pension failures and the impacts on retirees, I wanted a source of cash that would allow me to survive during retirement if my monthly pension payment happened to be cut or eliminated. I’m a Singleton. This means that I can’t depend on someone else’s salary or expect that anyone else will take care of me. Creating a portfolio that pays me dividends every single month eases my worries about how to survive if my pension disappears.

That said, if I had invested that same money into the stock market over the same time period, my net worth would be a lot higher. I would be that much closer to early retirement!!! I hate to admit it but I’m realizing that choosing not to buy equities since 2009 was a very big money mistake.

Choosing dividends over straight equity investments was very definitely not the right move to make in 2011. According to the good folks on the Internet, the stock market returns have been higher than the returns on my dividend portfolio. In my defence, I wasn’t as knowledgeable as I am now. I succumbed to one of my many flaws – I’m stubborn. I was utterly convinced that my path was the absolute right one for my circumstances.

So now it’s time to fix this money mistake.

My new plan is to invest in an exchange-traded fund that invests in the global market place. This is an equity ETF and I plan to hold it for a very long time. I do believe that over the long-term, the stock market rises.

One of the wisest things I’ve ever read on the internet was an article that stated that one shouldn’t invest believing that age 65 is a portfolio’s end date. It persuasively argued that one’s investment horizon ends at death, not at retirement. People are living into their 80s and 90s, which means that a 40-year old still has a 40+ year timespan over which to watch their money grow. That bit of wisdom shook me up. I’ll need the growth from my equity investment to power my portfolio until the end of my life, not just until the end of my career.

I’ve also decided not to divest myself of my dividend-producing assets. They’ll continue to grow over the next few decades. I’ve accepted that their growth will be slower since I won’t be adding new money to that part of my portfolio. Once my equity holdings make up 40% of my investment portfolio, then I’ll start to consider re-directing new cash into buying more units in my dividend ETFs.

So my portfolio will continue to churn out dividends, and my new money will go towards buying units in my global equity-focused ETF.

What about the recession that’s coming?

Yes – I’ll admit that the Talking Heads of the Media have been nattering quite a bit about the upcoming recession. It caused me concern for about 3 minutes, then I chose to ignore them. I won’t allow their incessant chinwag to dissuade me from my chosen path.

First, no one has been able to tell me when the recession will start, how long it will last, nor how bad it will be. There’s nothing I can do about the recession.

Second, there will be a recovery from the upcoming recession. There is always a recovery from a recession. I have no reason to think this time will be any different. Much like the recession itself, the recovery’s details are a mystery. No one knows when the recovery will start, how long it will last, and how good it will be.

Third, recessions are a natural part of the economic cycle. Stock markets do not rise forever. They go up and they go down. It’s normal and natural. The best bet is to ignore the hysteria from the Talking Heads, to invest early & often, and to go about the daily business of life.

Fourth, I plan to be in the stock market for the long-term. I’m not timing the stock market. I’m starting to put time into the stock market. The only way for me to have time in the market is to start buying now. I’m going to follow the advice of J.L. Collins, who wrote The Simple Path to Wealth, by buying into an equity product and letting the stock market do its thing for a very long time.

I’m never going to make the perfect investment choices all of the time. However, what I am going to do is continue to learn and think about how best to achieve my money goals. And when I find that I’m making a money mistake, I’m going to stop making it.

When you know better, you do better.

Start Today

There’s no one perfect way to become financially savvy. Yet, I can promise you that you won’t obtain the knowledge you need unless you start today.

There are very few people in your life who will care about your financial health as much as you do. If you’re lucky, your family will take it upon themselves to teach you what you need to know to be successful with money. Once you’re an adult, you owe it to yourself to build upon the lessons that your family taught you and to share that increased knowledge with those closest to your heart.

Your employer pays you to do a job. She really doesn’t care what you do with your money so long as it doesn’t negatively impact how you perform as an employee. She doesn’t care if you save to pay cash for your goals, whether you pay off your debts, or if you invest for your retirement. At best, she cares that you don’t ask for her to pay you any more than you currently earn to do your job.

On the other hand, the AdMan cares about your money very much, and so does his trusty sidekick, the Creditor. They care about taking it away from you. The AdMan’s sole goal is to convince you to give your money to someone else – a restaurant, a retailer, a car dealership, a pharmaceutical company. The AdMan doesn’t care who you give it to, so long as you give your money away.

The Creditor simply wants you to give your money to him. The Creditor will lend you money because he wants you to pay it back with interest.

Your ability to avoid falling into a deep debt hole is contingent on learning how personal finance works. Creating effective strategies to achieve your goals and dreams is going to be somewhat dependent on how you handle the money that comes your way. Part of self-care is learning the lessons of money.

Start today. Whether you need to pay off a debt or you want to save for next year’s vacation, I want you to start today. It may take a while to achieve your goal and that’s perfectly okay. The sooner you start, the better off you’ll be. No one has ever regretted handling their money in a way that allows them to meet their life’s goals.

Don’t be too hard on yourself. No one has ever learned it all at once, and you won’t either. Believe me when I say that you won’t pick the perfect investment – no such thing exists. You can start immediately – there’s no need to wait until January 1 of next year. There’s no time like the present. Transfer $1, $5, $10 to your savings account. If you don’t have a saving account, open one then make the transfer. Commit to one no-spend day per week or per month. Figure out how to prepare and cook more of your own meals. These are small changes within your locus of control. They will help you reach your goals.

Your money situation won’t change by itself. Nothing changes until you do. Start reading books and blogs today. You don’t have to master it all at once. Open a savings account – set up an automatic savings plan – accumulate your first $1,000. And while you’re doing that, read books and consume blogs about investing so that you feel more comfortable with the topic. Again, don’t be too hard on yourself; no one knows everything so you’re not alone. And when you are finally comfortable making your first investment, I want you to only invest in things you could explain to your grandmother. If you don’t understand an investment product, do not invest in it until you do. Never let anyone bully you into putting your hard-earned money towards something you don’t understand.

Today is the best time to plant your money tree. The sooner it’s planted, the longer it has to grow.

Start learning – don’t ever stop. Start saving money – don’t stop! Start taking care of yourself financially so you’re not dependent on others to do so.

Knowledge is power. Take the small steps first. Start today.

The Money-Saving Magic of my Kitchen

I have to admit that it sometimes takes me a very long time to learn lessons that should be obvious. One of those lessons is how the kitchen can be used to significantly cut food costs. Today’s lesson, Gentle Reader, is about the money-saving magic of my kitchen.

At the end of last week, I found myself in the very happy position of having some extra money in my bank account. Hurray! Being the money nerd that I am, I promptly started reviewing my outstanding credit card charges and my surplus funds went to paying them off.

But I had to ask myself – where did that extra money come from? I’m almost always wondering how to stretch my remaining money at this point in my paycheque cycle. If my bank account were a gas tank, I’d characterize this point of the cycle as “running on financial fumes.” It’s not fun, but I’d also believed it was unavoidable.

I was wrong.

The reason for my unexpected largesse was the money-saving magic of my kitchen.

Clarification please, Blue Lobster – what in the hell are you talking about?

My kitchen is home to my fridge, an old-fashioned upright refrigerator with a handy-dandy freezer at the top. The weekend before last, I went grocery-shopping and purchased a bulk pack of chicken. I decided to cook several pieces for lunch. The rest of the chicken was rubbed in a lovely marinade, portioned into freezer bags, and set inside my freezer. I took my lunch to work with me four days last week, saving myself atleast $80 in the process.

In addition to my magnificent refrigerator and its freezer, my kitchen is also home to a working oven & stovetop. Again, I cooked some of the chicken and I also prepared some saffron rice for myself. After dinner, I portioned out the chicken and rice into several reusable containers. They were stacked in the fridge and I simply tossed one into my lunch-bag each morning before I left to catch my bus. No more scrambling to make a tasty lunch in the morning. I didn’t have to figure out which of the it-all-tastes-the-same-to-me dining establishments would have the privilege of serving me their food.

As I’ve written before, cooking at home is a money-saver. It’s healthier and often tastier than whatever you can buy at a restaurant or fast-food outlet. For the most part, you control the amount of sugar, fat and salt that goes into the food you cook because you get to adjust the recipe to suit your tastes. The cherry on the sundae is that your wallet stays heavy as you eat your own homemade food.

The beauty of using the freezer along with my range is that I minimized the amount of cooking and grocery-shopping that I have to do. For as much as I love eating good food, I really hate shopping for groceries. In my family, I’m an oddity. Both my mother and my brother love grocery-shopping. I chalk it up to them both being Pisces…

After a long day in the office, I’m not exactly excited to get into the kitchen and create a lovely meal from scratch. I’m far more likely to eat Triscuits with cheese, or enjoy a lovely bowl of breakfast cereal. These aren’t good meal options!

The awesome appliances in my kitchen minimize the drudgery of cooking every single day!!! I cook on Sundays, then – maybe – again on Thursday or Friday night. The marinated meat that I’d stashed in my freezer is ready to be put into the oven after having been safely thawed in the fridge. It doesn’t take long to cook some rice, to boil some potatoes, or to make some pasta to go with my meat. Add in a bag of salad or some veggies and voila! Dinner is ready to go relatively quickly. Again, there is no need to cook every day – make enough rice/potatoes/pasta/whatever-side-you-prefer to last for a few days.

No Fail Marinade Recipes

If you’re a fan of sweet-and-spicy, try this recipe for sriracha brown sugar chicken. It’s absolute delicious! I wish I could say that I created this recipe but I did not. It’s from the website Dinner then Dessert, one of my favorite places to find new recipes. I’m already salivating as I sit here thinking about how tasty my lunches are going to be this week!

Here’s another magnificent recipe for honey garlic chicken. Again, I can’t take credit for this recipe. I found it at Chef Savvy. What I can take credit for is creating a honey garlic marinade for the two packages of chicken thighs that are currently sitting in my freezer. They will be utterly scrumptious when I cook them for lunch in the future.

This particular recipe for sheet pan chicken tinga bowls has been on my mind since I first saw it on my Instagram feed. Again, the credit for this recipe has to go to the website called Pinch of Yum. Technically, this is a make-ahead meal but I think you could make the sauce, let it cool, pour it over the chicken, then freeze it until you’re ready to eat it.

So far, I’ve only used chicken with my marinades. This is because I love chicken in all forms, except feet & liver. Chicken liver = yucky! That said, I’m not adverse to finding marinade recipes for other meats. Ideally, I’d like to find an equally delightful marinade for pork chops that can be baked in the oven.

Learn it, live it!

I have learned my lesson. There is no way around my deep-seated fondness for eating. However, I do have the capacity to find recipes that will make my tummy happier. I’m smart enough to cook without starting fires. The internet is filled with recipes and You Tube is bursting with videos of people making those recipes.

I’ve learned my lesson – cooking once a week is grand. Marinating my meat in advance will save me trips to the grocery store and will save me some prep time during the week. My range & my freezer are my friends. I can eat well without whipping out my wallet on workdays.

Let me say it again – I love the money-saving magic of my kitchen! I have the tools at my disposal to create fabulous meals for myself while saving a boatload of money at the same time. When it comes to food, what could be better than that?