What caught my eye this week.
I first came across Marie Kondo when a friend’s departing ex left him The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up as a parting gift.
Quite an intimate detail to share with me, you might say, except he didn’t do so deliberately.
I literally stumbled across the book on top of a pile of about 50 others – surrounded by four or five other such piles – when I visited to see how he was doing.
This isn’t a cute metaphor. He really was a messy hoarder, his stuff was all over the place, and she’d had enough.
My friend eventually got rid of a lot of his junk, but it wasn’t because he rejected consumerism.
Rather he leveled up by buying his own expensive – but not expansive – London flat. He couldn’t fit everything in, so he was forced to clear out.
Indeed I didn’t even think about Kondo in the context of tactical frugality until I read the excellent Reset by David Sawyer. For Sawyer, a critical step towards intentional living with fewer shopping trips was to jettison vast amounts of material from his home.
This does seem to me an odd notion.
I lived my ascetic graduate student lifestyle for many years, and so I never accumulated much expensive flotsam and jetsam.
But the key advantage wasn’t that I could open my cupboards without a crash helmet or dodge choice paralysis when confronted with my barely half-a-dozen pairs of shoes.
It was that I didn’t spend the money on lots of stuff in first the place! Let alone on having to hire vans and skips to take it all away again.
When Kondo’s KonMari method reached Netflix this year, my skepticism returned. Perhaps Sawyer’s readers do find the hard reboot of a spring clean an important step. He’s wrapping it up within a redesigned frugal living package, after all.
But for many Tidying Up viewers, I suspect clearing space in the closet will just leave a void to fill.
According to a (securely paywall-ed) Wall Street Journal article this week, Kondo’s impact is now rippling across the US thrift economy:
A global ‘Tidying Up’ frenzy is burying donation centers with goods that truly, nobody wants.
“We aren’t a place for people to just dump their rubbish.”
Call me cynical, but I suspect many of these new Kondo converts filling their SUVs with unwanted things (a) are signalling how soulful they are (b) showing-off how well they’re doing, perhaps unconsciously, via their rejected excess stuff, and (c) will be restocking before summer is out.
But maybe I’m wrong. Perhaps a retail rout will follow. Time will tell.
I stress again, I’m not knocking the general philosophy. When I was at the height of my minimalist powers in the early 2000s, a visiting friend asked if I’d been robbed.
But has anyone out there used Kondo to jump start a permanent switch from shopping til dropping?
From Monevator
Robot angels: Automated seed investing on the Seedrs crowdfunding platform – Monevator
The Gordon Equation: how to calculate expected returns for equities – Monevator
From the archive-ator: Learn how to get rich from a video game – Monevator
Archive-ator bonus: It’s 10 years ago since the bear market bottom – Monevator
News
Note: Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view you can click to read the piece without being a paid subscriber. Try privacy/incognito mode to avoid cookies. Consider subscribing if you read them a lot!1
Life expectancy falls by six months in biggest drop in UK forecasts – Guardian
House prices bounced back 5.9% in January – AOL
UK cash system ‘on verge of collapse’ says report – Guardian
World’s largest sovereign wealth fund to drop oil and gas stocks – CNBC
Google’s AI-powerhouse DeepMind will open a huge new London HQ in 2020 – Wired
Private equity has trillions, but research shows women get little of it – Bloomberg
Workplace theft is on the rise – The Atlantic
Your scheduled reminder that fund out-performance is typically fleeting – Bloomberg
Products and services
ISAs: Who wants to be a millionaire? [Search result] – FT
Almost 90% of UK shoppers use Amazon, and 40% have access to Prime – Guardian
The £100 bonus from Ratesetter boosts your expected first year return on £1,000 to 14% – Ratesetter [Affiliate link]
Will these be the worst new ‘rabbit hutch’ flats in Britain? – Guardian
Terry Smith’s Smithson investment trust seems off to a solid start – IT Investor
Comment and opinion
Average long-term returns hide a lot of ups and downs – A Wealth of Common Sense
Lighten the load – Humble Dollar
What happens after you win? – The Irrelevant Investor
Even Keynes couldn’t time the market – The Evidence-based Investor
Most investors should be satisficers not maximisers – Behavioural Investment
The single woman’s guide to retirement planning [Paywall, but clickthrough] – Barron’s
Recessions: It’s been a while – Morgan Housel
From gloom to boom – Investing Caffeine
Is Unilever still a no-brainer for dividend investors? [PDF] – John Kingham
Hargreaves Lansdown Vs. Nick Train Vs. Terry Smith – Sharepad
Valuing Lyft ahead of the ride-sharing company’s IPO – Musings on Markets
Brexit
Brexit in a nutshell – via Twitter
Kindle book bargains
The Complete Guide to Property Investment by Rob Dix – £0.99 on Kindle
Pre-Suasion: A Revolutionary Way to Influence and Persuade by Robert Cialdini – £1.99 on Kindle
The $100 Startup by Chris Guillebeau – £0.99 on Kindle
Off our beat
Does social status still matter when you hit a certain age? [Search result] – FT
Also: The life-changing magic of discovering grey hair – Quartz
The people who eat the same thing for lunch everyday [Is me!] – The Atlantic
What does ‘self-made’ mean (or matter) anyway? – Hunter Walk
The Stormtrooper problem: Why thought diversity makes us better – Farnham Street
Having fun is a virtue, not a guilty pleasure – Quartz [via Abnormal Returns]
…though work isn’t really so bad [Research] – Marginal Revolutions
You are not trying to be liked. You are trying to be judged – Medium
And finally…
“Being a citizen is an active state; being a consumer is passive.”
– Roger McNamee, Zucked: Waking up to the Facebook Catastrophe
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- Note some articles can only be accessed through the search results if you’re using PC/desktop view (from mobile/tablet view they bring up the firewall/subscription page). To circumvent, switch your mobile browser to use the desktop view. On Chrome for Android: press the menu button followed by “Request Desktop Site”.
from Monevator https://monevator.com/weekend-reading-minimalism-is-for-life-not-just-for-netflix/
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