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Does a new car make us happy

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Massive drop: Naamsa recorded a drop in new vehicle sales April 2017. Picture: iStock
Massive drop: Naamsa recorded a drop in new vehicle sales April 2017. Picture: iStock

I have spent the past week interviewing potential candidates for the Absa/City Press Money Makeover competition. It is so interesting that almost all applicants state that their biggest financial mistake was buying a new car.

As one applicant said to me: “I feel so depressed when I just think how much money I would have now if I had invested rather than spent it on car repayments.” For him the car was a missed opportunity for wealth creation, but for others car repayments are an albatross around their necks, affecting their ability to meet other needs. One applicant recently had a child and now finds that he cannot provide a home and educate his child while the car repayments continue.

There is not a single person who says they are still glad they bought the car – all of them wish they could go back in time and make a different decision. Spending 30% to 40% of your salary on a car each month will not help you in achieving financial freedom.

If only we understood this before we signed up for new wheels because one thing is absolutely clear – a new car will not make you happy.

Professor Howell, an associate professor of psychology at San Francisco State University, undertook a research study on money and happiness and found that experiences, rather than material goods, bring longer-lasting happiness. That means spending money on a family holiday or going to see your favourite rock band would give you greater satisfaction than buying a car or designer handbag.

Howell’s study found that despite this, we tend to spend more on material items because we think that, as a new car lasts longer than a family holiday, it will make us happier. Howell argues that a fancy car or a new pair of shoes will provide a brief thrill, but we soon take it for granted, while experiences provide more lasting value.

In my experience, both in my personal life and in my engagements with ordinary South Africans, I believe that it is not money in itself, or what we buy with it, that makes us happy, but the lack of financial stress that money, used correctly, can provide.

If you knew you had enough money not to worry about paying the bills and were on track financially to retire one day, you would be significantly happier. Imagine the feeling on waking up tomorrow with no debt! Yet what do we do when we get more money? We spend more.

If we spend money on things to make us happy, which end up putting financial strain on ourselves, we go from temporary happiness to very real unhappiness and desperation.

So, if you really want lasting happiness, don’t spend money on things that will put you under financial stress.

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