Anyways, penny wise and pound foolish is an age-old idiom and, as any age old tenets are, there is some truth in it.
Alright, here are media examples:
1. Penny wise and pound foolish sounds like a funny saying, but it’s actually a pretty important concept when it comes to living a frugal life.
For those of you who don’t know what the phrase means, it more or less means you sweat the small costs so much that you either end up incurring a larger expense down the road or miss an opportunity make a ton of money.
Or, to use another idiom, it’s not being able to see the forest for the trees.
If this still doesn’t make sense, here are some real world examples. Let me know if you’re guilty of any of these:
Buying the cheapest product at the expense of quality. For example, your refrigerator breaks, so you run out to the store and replace it with the cheapest model at $500 for the sake of minimizing the expense.
Seems to make sense right? Not necessarily.
If you would have just done a little bit of research you would have found that the cheapest model lasts only five years on average, and that the $650 model – just slightly more expensive – last for eight years on average, and is more energy efficient.
So, instead of saving $150 up front, you actually end up losing at least $350 after five years when you end up replacing the cheaper fridge instead of having another three years with the slightly more expensive model....
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