A Financial Expert's Best Savings Tips

In her Washington Post/Bloomberg column, Michelle Singletary offers helpful tips on saving money during the economic downturn. She quotes her grandmother, who used to say, "You can't have a dollar without a penny." Suggested Reading Tupac Associate Young Noble’s Death Illuminates Alarming Fact About Suicide Rates Among Black Men Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Recent Dissent…

In her Washington Post/Bloomberg column, Michelle Singletary offers helpful tips on saving money during the economic downturn. She quotes her grandmother, who used to say, "You can't have a dollar without a penny."

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It's so sweet when you find a good way to save money. I know I get giddy when I discover a way to spend less and still live well.

There are a few things I do to shave money from my budget every month. To some it may seem like small savings, but as my grandmother, Big Mama, used to say, "You can't have a dollar without a penny."

Some of the things we penny-pinchers do might seem obvious, but many people fail to take the small and simple steps to savings because they think that it doesnโ€™t really add up. But it does. Here are ways to cut your spending:ย 

* Bag your lunch at work. You could save $5 day or $1,300 a year.

* Don't burn money. The average pack-a-day smoker spends about $5 a day for cigarettes. That's $1,825 per year. Without even investing that money, you can save more than $18,000 over 10 years by kicking the habit.

Read Michelle Singletary's entire column at the Washington Post/Bloomberg.

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