How To Rebuild The Economy From The Ground Up
Will Obama-nomics and the Obama economic plan work? That remains to be seen. However, with the new Obama administration and the financial “experts” telling us it may be years before we see an economic recovery, most of us don’t have time to wait for the politicians to get their act together. We, as a nation, need to take the economy into our own hands and speed up the recovery as quickly as possible.
But how do we do that, exactly? With figures in the trillions of dollars, it would seem impossible for any individual to have much of an effect on our current economic crisis.
“The answer is correct money management and the correct handling of our finances,” says money management expert Sandra Simmons. “We got ourselves into this situation because we, as a nation, have violated many of the basic principles of sound financial management. No matter what the government does, in the end, all of us need to change the way we handle money and credit in order to truly get the economy back on track.”
In particular, Simmons takes aim at America’s over-indulgent love affair with credit. Credit, she says, is an all-too-seductive trap that has lured an entire nation to shipwreck upon hidden fiscal shoals. Almost everyone, from the largest of companies to the individual consumer fell into the credit trap and began living a false lifestyle that was way above its means. This false economic condition was a ticking time bomb just waiting for the right set of circumstances to explode.
“At any given point-in-time, we are all in a certain financial condition,” explains Simmons. “And it is easy to fool yourself into thinking that you are in a better condition than you are actually in. The basis for this false financial condition is usually an over-reliance on credit to supplement your income. Too much credit and too much debt inevitably leads to a financial crash.”
Although Simmons has been writing and lecturing on the dangers of credit and debt for years, the recent U.S. Economic crisis has brought the point home with historical force. Financial pundits and politicians may complain that this “Economic Tsunami” was unforeseen, but Simmons disagrees.
“If you analyze the histories of economic bubbles, you will find at their root violations of sound money management principles. Whether it’s herd mentality or some other phenomena, group-think drives people to take actions they intuitively know to be unsound and overly risky,” she says. “But the terrible truth is that people know when they’ve extended themselves too far and national confidence begins to wane.”
Confidence, says Simmons, is the single most important hallmark of any strong economy. The question becomes how confident can anyone be when they know that they owe their lifestyle and economic standing to a economic foundation based on credit. Like any structure built on an unstable base, it’s only a matter of time till it comes tumbling down.
“Conversely, an economy with little debt, operating on very little credit and strong reserves is an economy in very good shape and one that is very stable and hard to disrupt,” states Simmons. “The kind of money management system that I am talking about is actually the kind of system that is very old-school and traditional. That is a tried and true system. It works and it’s the road to financial freedom and wealth.”
According to Simmons, this is the real way to build the economy from the ground up. The goal should be to get every American applying the tried and true money management policies to their own lives and this would serve to create an extremely strong economic base on which to build an unshakable economy.
Simmons’s plan to grow the economy from the ground up would include:
1.Start using cash instead of credit.
“We have to break the cycle of using our credit cards for every financial transaction,” says Simmons. “Instead, use cash or your ATM card. If you can’t afford it, don’t buy it. Instead, save up for it if it is something you really want.”
Getting away from the instant gratification mindset that we have all become used to may go contrary to popular culture but it is the way to dig ourselves out of this economic mess.
“As a nation, it is not difficult to see the immediate effect it would have if we all stopped using credit cards and started using cash,” she says. “Many would argue against this, especially with the holiday season approaching. But we have to get off our credit addiction at some time, and now is as god a time as any to get into the right spending habits.”
2.Pay down your debts
Another unacceptable money management habit is carrying a large debt load.
“Somewhere along the line, it became acceptable to carry a large amount of debt,” notes Simmons. “Maybe this comes from Madison Avenue advertising campaigns, but this is completely wrong-headed. The goal should be to be completely debt-free. It doesn’t do to pay the minimum amount owed on debt. Additional money should be applied to debts to pay them off quickly.”
Debt, it could be stated, is at the root of all financial evil. Debt, by its very definition, carries with it, risk. That risk of course, is financial failure.
“I think the lessons of the Great Depression faded so far into the past that most of us forgot what could happen when you allow debt to accumulate,” Simmons observes. “The risk-taking by some of the largest financial institutions and our own government would have been unimaginable a generation ago. We can all get out of debt, but it does take a certain amount of planning and discipline. “
3.Build Reserves.
The road to wealth begins with putting money aside little by little into reserve accounts that are not touched except for emergencies.
“Unfortunately, the very concept of saving has gone completely out the window,” Simmons says. “Saving money is just not a popular concept anymore and is possibly viewed as old fashioned by some. As a result, the U.S. Ranks far down the list of countries whose workers and business owners regularly put money aside in savings, and this makes us very vulnerable when we can no longer work or when a crisis occurs in our lives.”
In fact, if anything, the messages in typical advertising and commercials is spend, spend, spend. If there are any suggestions in society about putting money aside, it certainly gets lost.
“In truth I think we’ve lost touch as a society with what it takes to build wealth and gain financial freedom,” says Simmons.”The fact of the matter is that anyone can become wealthy if they apply the right money management principles. It’s really not how much you make. It’s what you do with your money that counts.”
And Simmons has the client list to prove it. Despite the devastating economic storm, Simmons’ clients have weathered it rather well because they have applied her principles and were prepared.
Simmons is anxious to spread the word and is currently touring the U.S. giving seminars on the secrets of wealth building and financial freedom. Her next seminar is scheduled for the weekend of December 13th in the Tampa, Florida area.
If anyone thinks that we cannot change our collective financial habits for the better, Simmons cites one very prominent example.
“Just look at what we did with the gas prices,” she says. “The so-called experts said it couldn’t be done, but America, through our combined efforts, changed our habits and dramatically lowered the prices. It can be the same with the economy if we change our money management habits from the ground up. “

