I prefer my debt to only be on large things, like my car.
There's where we differ. I made a trip to New Hampshire a year ago (to pick up the ShoWagon) and I took $200 cash with me. I am now down to the final $10 of that $200 in my wallet.
This is because everything I buy goes on my credit card, even $2.95 purchases at the auto parts store.
However, I have an absolutely inviolable rule: If I do not have money in the bank to cover the purchase, I don't make the purchase. I have no idea what the interest rate on my credit card is, as I have never paid interest -- the bill is paid in full every month.
I have saved all my credit card bills for the last 10 years or so, and thus I can tell you what just about every nickel I have spent has been for. It is very nice to get a monthly summary of everything I have spent money on.
A credit card when used properly is not a spawn of the devil -- it is a useful money management tool.
tanstaafl.
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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"