1/ What’s cheap is often more expensive. What does this mean exactly? Let me explain.
2/ My wife and I are both conservative with money. We’re always looking for the bargain, the discount, the special one-time sale. Last year, we bought a house. And when you buy a house, there’s a lot of stuff you have to spend money on that comes along with a house.
3/ Contractors, accountants, designers, lawyers, and so on. Sadly, we learned the hard way—over and over again—that the money you save by hiring the less expensive contractor or the newer designer ends up costing you far more in their mistakes.
4/ Cheaper furniture becomes damaged or breaks more easily, costing you more to repair/replace it. Cheaper plumbing costs you more when a pipe bursts. And a cheaper decorator costs you much more when it turns out he measured half the stuff incorrectly.
5/ I started to realize that this is actually true for a lot of things in life. You wouldn’t want to bargain hunt on a brain surgeon, for instance—or any doctor, for that matter.
6/ You could argue that you shouldn’t cheap out on food—as the lack of nutrition from cheap, poorly-produced food will more than make up for itself in health problems later on.
7/ Even clothes, the cheaper the fabric, the more often you’ll spend money replacing them.
8/ Spanish-speaking readers told me that they have a saying for this phenomenon in their language: *lo barato sale caro*, or “the cheap turns out expensive.” We could use a saying like that in English. So here you go, let’s make it a thing: *What’s cheap is often more expensive*.
9/ Do you have an example of how cheap ended up costing you more?
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