Los Angeles Times

Cars, 'clout-chasing,' and Kanye merch: People confess their most expensive money mistakes

What do Americans do most with their money? Make mistakes, apparently. That's according to the annual raft of January surveys that attempt to define and make sense of the nation's consumer behavior over the previous 12 months. When it comes to financial literacy, the picture is grim: According to a Credit Karma survey, 76% of people polled said they had committed at least one faux pas with ...
Here are some financial errors that many Americans can relate to: buying expensive cars before building good credit; staying loyal to a stockbroker who no longer gave good advice; and spending carelessly to fulfill an emotional need.

What do Americans do most with their money? Make mistakes, apparently.

That's according to the annual raft of January surveys that attempt to define and make sense of the nation's consumer behavior over the previous 12 months.

When it comes to financial literacy, the picture is grim: According to a Credit Karma survey, 76% of people polled said they had committed at least one faux pas with their funds in 2022 and 35% admitted they had adopted a new bad money habit. In 2022, 66% of respondents claimed it would be the year they would become become financially stable, according to a poll by Slickdeals, but only 53% have the same expectations for 2023.

"None of this should come as a surprise," said John Grace, owner and president of Investors Advantage in Westlake Village, a financial advisory firm he has run for the past 44 years. Good financial thinking "is one of the things we don't teach," Grace said. "We show everyone how to get credit, how to buy things online, how to spend, baby, spend, right? But we're not taught about how to manage money."

That's certainly the case for the

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