Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Expenditure. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Expenditure Quotes And Sayings by 95 Authors including Roger Moore,Jason Silva,Sigmund Freud,Mason Cooley,Morarji Desai for you to enjoy and share.
Not only am I a spender, I have had a couple of business people in the past who have been spending my money quite happily.
Post-Scarcity Age, you don't pay for things. Abundance.
One must not be mean with affections; what is spent of the funds is renewed in the spending itself. Left untouched for too long, they diminish imperceptibly or the lock gets rusty; they are there all right but one cannot make use of them.
Money comes to life as it is spent.
Society at present suffers far more from waste of money than from want of it. There is dignity in every attempt to economise. It indicates self-denial and imparts strength of character. It produces a well-regulated mind.
Spend and be free, but make no waste.
I spend my money...I don't know on what.
I spend money on convenient, comfortable and luxurious things; I spend money on books too.
Know the difference between your necessary and discretionary expenses.
Budgets are not merely affairs of arithmetic, but in a thousand ways go to the root of prosperity of individuals, the relation of classes and the strength of kingdoms.
If money is spent in the wrong way, then 'control' the spending and if the money is spent in the right way, then 'decontrol' the spending.
A lack of trust is your biggest expense.
Avarice has ruined more men than prodigality, and the blindest thoughtlessness of expenditure has not destroyed so many fortunes as the calculating but insatiable lust of accumulation.
The value of a thing sometimes lies not in what one attains with it, but in what one pays for it - what it costs us.
Avoid] likewise the accumulation of debt ...
Any fool can spend money. But to earn it and save it and defer gratification - then you learn to value it differently.
Do you have to regret spending money when you earn money? And when it is time to spend, you should be strong that you got the opportunity to pay off your debt. Income is one's responsibility and expense is the means to clear off the responsibility.
The necessity of every one paying in his own labor for what he consumes, affords the only legitimate and effectual check to excessive luxury, which has so often ruined individuals, states and empires; and which has now brought almost universal bankruptcy upon us.
Labour once spent has no influence on the future value of any article; it isgone and lost for ever. In commerce bygones are forever bygones; and we are alwaysstarting clearat each moment, judging the values of things with a view to future utility.
Nothing more costly than item that has no price.
Consumption may be regarded as negative production.
We tend to spend money for quality items, but we tend spend time for non quality activity
We are not to judge thrift solely by the test of saving or spending. If one spends what he should prudently save, that certainly is to be deplored. But if one saves what he should prudently spend, that is not necessarily to be commended. A wise balance between the two is the desired end.
Men are tight-fisted in keeping control of their fortunes, but when it comes to the matter of wasting time, they are positively extravagant in the one area where there is honour in being miserly.
Honestly, I'm not an extravagant person; I don't spend a lot of money.
The greatest cost, namely time.
Be at the pains of putting down every single item of expenditure whatsoever every day which could possibly be twisted into a professional expense and remember to lump in all the doubtfulls.
Economic stimulation that works through the increased outlays to the affluent has, inevitably, an aspect of soundness and sanity that is lacking in expenditure on behalf of the undeserving poor.
A small proportion to be spent on production, the rest for wine and senseless riot.
It is a popular delusion that the government wastes vast amounts of money through inefficiency and sloth. Enormous effort and elaborate planning are required to waste this much money.
People spend money when and where they feel good.
Waste in all its forms is to be abhorred ... I deplore giving money to an institution that is careless in its expenditures.
Luxury is a necessity that begins where necessity ends
When people don't pay the true cost of something, they tend to consume it inefficiently.
The Enlightened one (Gnani Purush) never wastes his time in counting money; focus of the awareness of the self (upayog) is wasted in doing this. One's focused awareness (upayog) is where he has 'interest'!
A well-worn adage advises those who set out upon a great enterprise to count the cost, yet some of the greatest enterprises have succeeded because the people who undertook them did not count the cost.
Where there is abundance you can afford waste.
Cost is the father and compensation the mother of progress.
To be extravagant you need money. True. But you do not need your own money.
I do spend money. I like to spend money, on houses - on furnishing houses. And I love to give presents to people. It's just in my nature to be that way. I always spent money I had. And I always spent what I made. I'm not stingy.
One just spends as much money as one has. Very peculiar that! You never actually have any money. You think, If I had this much money ten years ago, I would have thought I was amazingly rich, but I still manage to spend it all and not have any left.
We spend money that we do not have, on things we do not need, to impress people who do not care.
Government spending? I don't know what it's all about. I don't know any more about this thing than an economist does, and, God knows, he doesn't know much.
Mere parsimony is not economy. Expense, and great expense, may be an essential part in true economy.
5. Pay now and consume later
It is much more difficult to recede from a scale of expenditure once adopted than it is to extend the accustomed scale in response to an accession of wealth.
The public treasure has been duly applied to the uses to which it was appropriated by Parliament, and regular accounts have been annually laid before Parliament, of every article of expense.
The opposite of consumption isn't thrift. It's generosity.
Lavish spending cloaks the dark side of generosity
Those things that are dearest to us have cost us the most.
Buying experience such as going out to dinner or taking a vacation increases our own wellbeing and the wellbeing of others. Experiences last while material purchases fade.
A thousand pounds for clothes
when on thinks how long poor people could live on it! When one thinks how long we could live on it, for that matter!
Time has changed and now is the age of spending.
A nation's budget is full of moral implications; it tells what a society cares about and what it does not care about; it tells what its values are.
Money not spent on a luxury one considered even briefly is the equivalent of windfall income and should be spent accordingly.
It is the highest impertinence and presumption, therefore, in kings and ministers to pretend to watch over the economy of private people, and to restrain their expense. They are themselves, always, and without any exception, the greatest spendthrifts in the society.
Your choices: spend, and believe in things; save, and believe in money.
Spending is not caring. Spending is what politicians do instead of caring. Spending more does not guarantee success. Politicians like to measure spending because it is easier than measuring actual metrics of accomplishment.
I spend way more than I should ... and way less than I want.Spend-- Nan Kempner
The war (WWI) cost your Uncle Sam $52 billion. $39 billion was expended in the actual war period. This expenditure yielded $16 billion in profits.
Every week I'll be spending money on flights, accommodation, stringing and even things as simple as taxis, meals out and, of course, paying the other members of my team. I'm still very careful, though, with what I'm spending.
My only extravagance in life is my sailboat. I'm bonkers about that, but other than that, I don't spend money on myself.
This is a spendthrift economy; though nothing is lost, all is spent.
The least practical of us have some petty thrift dear to our hearts, some one direction in which we love to scrimp.
some things cost more than you realize
There are, while human miseries abound, A thousand ways to waste superfluous wealth, Without one fool or flatterer at your board, Without one hour of sickness or disgust.
all government expenditures must eventually be paid out of the proceeds of taxation; that inflation itself is merely a form, and a particularly vicious form, of taxation. Having
And with the money from your corn, from your rents, and from the issues of pleas in your courts, and from your stock, arrange the expenses of your kitchen and your wines and your wardrobe and the wages of servants, and subtract your stock.
Every luxury must be paid for, and everything is a luxury, starting with being in this world.
The table groans under the heavy and blood-bought luxuries gathered with painstaking care, at home and abroad. Fields, forests, rivers and seas, are made tributary here. Immense wealth, and its lavish expenditure, fill the great house with all that can please the eye, or tempt the taste.
Our virtues live upon our incomes; our vices consume our capital.
Wasting a fortune is evaporation by a thousand imperceptible means.
To make any gain some outlay is necessary.
Men become richer not only by increasing their existing wealth but also by decreasing their expenditure.
I am sorry to tell you that I am getting very extravagant and spending all my money: and what is worse for you, I have been spending yours too.
Like every other good thing in this
world, leisure and culture have to be paid for. Fortunately, however,
it is not the leisured and the cultured who have to pay. Let us be
duly thankful for that, my dear Denis
duly thankful.
He who is extravagant will quickly become poor; and poverty will enforce dependence, and invite corruption.
The creature comforts we tend to rationalize as "business expenses I can write off."
It is in spending oneself that one becomes rich.
The boom squanders through malinvestment scarce factors of production and reduces the stock available through overconsumption; its alleged blessings are paid for by impoverishment.
Money is a burden, a burden most keenly felt by the poor.
It is the expensiveness of our pleasures that makes the world poor and keeps us poor in ourselves. If we could but learn to find enjoyment in the things of the mind, the economic problems would solve themselves.
Don't spend...but mend yourself...
Luxury is experiencing reality
It is Enterprise which build and improves the world's possessions ... If Enterprise is afoot, Wealth accumulates whatever may be happening to Thrift; and if Enterprise is asleep, Wealth decays, whatever Thrift may be doing.
Your book bill ought to be your biggest extravagance.
The cost of anything is what you are prepared to do to obtain it.
Ever since the end of the nineteenth century, the problem of what to do with the surplus of consumption goods has been latent in industrial society.
It is wonderful to think how men of very large estates not only spend their yearly income, but are often actually in want of money. It is clear, they have not value for what they spend.
Waste is worse than loss. The time is coming when every person who lays claim to ability will keep the question of waste before him constantly. The scope of thrift is limitless.
Love is an ocean of emotions entirely surrounded by expenses.
No one spends someone elses money as carefully as he spends his own.
Buying is an activity understood by economists. Shopping is a phenomenon of interest to anthropologists and sociologists.
We make allowance for necessity.
The only expenditure, and all its outworkings, for which God can be held to be responsible is that which He directs.
Debt is not caused by spending, it is caused by buying things that you don't pay for. Or, it's caused by cutting revenues that you don't offset ... by cuts in spending.
You either waste, spend or invest time. Make your choice wisely
Instead of spending his whole income, he had laid by an annual sum for the
Time Progression: Wasting >>Spending >> Managing >> Investing
Eschew surplusage.