In the open-source software community, it is often said that “Linux is only free if your time is worth nothing.”

In the frugality blogosphere, in our hurry to convey Ten Great Tips for Trimming the Cost of Toilet Paper, we tend to forget the price of our our own life energy in any equation of savings. We also forget the opportunity cost of spending two hours trying to save a few pennies.

Here are some of the biggest offenders in the time-money tradeoff:

1. Clipping coupons. I’ll admit it - I do use coupons myself. I belong to MyPoints, and I can “clip” online coupons through them and get rewarded with points. I don’t spend a lot more effort than that on it, though; I probably use about three or four coupons a month.

The biggest problem with coupons is a) the amount of time it takes to coordinate the coupons one has with the items one actually needs, an b) the tendency to move items into the “need” category that shouldn’t be there as a result. We all like to think we’re smarter than that, but the notion that we’re getting a bargain can be pretty powerful. A Harvard Business School study shows that the redemption of a $10-off coupon increases an individual’s spending and that, furthermore, the increase in spending stimulated by the redemption of a $10-off coupon is focused on groceries that customers would not purchase in the absence of such a coupon.

Basically I look at coupons as just another advertising ploy to get us to buy. Proceed with caution.

2. Re-using sandwich/storage baggies. I keep telling myself I should pick up this habit. But inevitably the dirty baggies pile up next to the sink and the cats get to them and leave tiny teethmarks on the corners, forcing me to throw them out.

Eventually I realized this: I hate dishes enough. It is just not worth my time, considering the only money I’m saving is a) the cost of a new box of bags, or b) the space they take up in my trash. (We have a “pay as you throw” garbage system in Lunenburg).

I know, I know. Amy Dacycyn of The Tightwad Gazette said this was cost-effective - she can’t possibly be wrong, can she? But I, unlike Ms. Dacycyn, work a full-time job at a location which is not my home - the value of my time, as measured by the value of my pay, is probably worth more than hers. Plus, I always thought her estimate of how long it took to get a plastic baggie clean was way too low.

If you value reducing your trash production for environmental reasons, a better long-term solution is to buy a quality set of reusable plastic containers. You don’t even need to buy them new; I see these at garage sales all the time.

3. Cutting corners on food. It’s a conundrum that the food that’s healthiest for us is most expensive, but food needs to be a priority spending category. Packing your diet full of processed products only means you won’t be around long enough to figure out those ten great tips for saving on toilet paper.

Keep in mind, too, in paying the premium for quality, sustainably harvested food, what you’re getting is not only better taste and nutrition - you’re contributing to a living wage for small farmers everywhere. Given the worldwide food shortages going on right now (caused in part by an emphasis on certain subsidized crops over others), you are quite literally putting your money where your mouth is when you do this. Spending more now on quality foods means that you’ll actually have these foods when times get even tougher.

That said, there are ways to save money on your food bill. Don’t dine out every night, shop around the outside of the store, stick to unprocessed or minimally processed foods, and look for generic versions of healthy or organic foods. Hannaford, for example, has a great line of its own organic foods, and my local one has recently started offering foods from a local farm.

It is also important to consider the quality of the food you feed your pets. A more expensive food may cost more in the short term, but you’ll be reducing your bottom line on vet bills, grooming bills, and the cost of litter. I’ll be the first to admit I’m a bit of a pet food snob, but the lowest quality food I would consider feeding is Iams or Science Diet, and I would highly encourage all pet owners to educate themselves on feline/canine nutrition and seek out the highest quality food they can afford.

4. Make your own X. It pains me to say this, because I am the biggest DIY geek in the tri-state area, but in our modern society, it is almost never cost effective to make your own. I’d be dishonest if I said that the money and work I’ve put into, say, my garden, is cheaper than what it would cost me to buy a season’s worth of vegetables. Even Trent of The Simple Dollar, maker of his own detergent, admits that it would cost less to buy his detergent at a bulk discount store.

Caveat: there is one big exception to this DIY rule; namely, cooking for yourself (based on the fact that restaurant meals are incredibly inflated relative to the cost of food).

Savings aside, part of the reason I so often do-it-myself is because I want a product just so, and the effort of finding it that way may, in fact, be more time-consuming. My husband and I are foodies, and we’re attempting to grow our own vegetables because biting into a vegetable that’s still warm from the sun can’t easily be replicated.

This ties into another pleasure of DIY: the amount of satisfaction you get from doing something with one’s own hands. In a world so divorced from physical labor, this is priceless.

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