Why Poor People Make “Bad Decisions” — And What They Can Do Instead
Why Poor People Make “Bad Decisions” — And What They Can Do Instead
I have heard people say poor people make bad decisions. Sometimes they do. But so do people with money. The difference is that when poor people make a bad decision, the punishment comes faster, costs more, and lasts longer.
When you are poor, you are not always choosing between a good option and a bad option. A lot of times, you are choosing between two bad options and trying to figure out which one hurts the least.
That does not mean every decision should be excused. It means the decision needs to be understood before it is decided.
Here are twelve decisions poor people are often criticized for making, why those decisions happen, what they should do instead, a practical plan, and places where struggling families may be able to ask for help.
1. Taking Payday Loans or High-Interest Loans
It is not always financial ignorance. Sometimes it is desperation with a deadline. When the rent is due, the lights are about to be shut off, or the car needs repair so you can get to work, a terrible loan can start looking like the only door still open.
Before taking a payday loan, look for a lower-damage option first. Ask the utility company for a payment plan. Ask for a short extension. Check local churches, charities, veterans’ groups, community programs, or trusted family. Ask an employer about an advance if that is available. If borrowing is unavoidable, borrow the smallest amount possible and do not roll it over.
The first step is to stop treating payday loans like a normal solution. They are an emergency flare, not a financial plan.
Make a list of every place you can ask for help before you are in crisis: utility assistance, food pantry, church, local charity, employer, family, and community programs. Keep phone numbers written down.
If you already have a payday loan, make a payoff plan. Pay it down as fast as possible. Stop the rollover cycle. That rollover is where the trap tightens.
Call 211 for local emergency financial assistance, they're open 24/7 and available in 180 languages. Check local credit unions for payday alternative loans. Contact a nonprofit credit counseling agency, such as the National Foundation for Credit Counseling. Ask local churches, Catholic Charities, United Way agencies, Salvation Army offices, or community action agencies about emergency rent, utility, or transportation help.
2. Buying Cheap Items That Cost More in the Long Run
Poverty forces people to buy what they can afford today, not what saves money tomorrow. A poor person may know the better pair of shoes will last longer, but knowing that does not put the extra money in their pocket.
For things used every day, try to buy the most durable version you can afford, even if that means buying used. Shoes, tires, tools, mattresses, work clothes, and appliances matter. A good used item is often better than a new cheap item.
Start separating purchases into two groups: temporary items and survival items. Survival items are things that affect work, health, safety, transportation, and daily life. Those deserve better choices when possible.
Before buying the cheapest option, ask one question: “Will this cost me more later?” If the answer is yes, slow down. Look for used quality. It may feel like the cheaper one is the best choice because you don't have the money for the more expensive one. But if the cheaper one only lasts 3 months but the slightly more expense one last a year, ask yourself which one is actually cheaper?
Do not feel ashamed for buying used. Poor people often waste money trying to look like they are not poor. A solid used item that works is better than a cheap new item that breaks.
Check Goodwill, Salvation Army thrift stores, local church clothing closets, community action agencies, Facebook Buy Nothing groups, school social workers, and local mutual-aid groups. For work clothes, women can check Dress for Success. For children’s clothing, ask schools, churches, local family resource centers, and community charities.
3. Ignoring Medical or Dental Problems
A lot of poor people do not ignore health problems because they do not care. They ignore them because they are choosing between medicine, food, rent, transportation, and work. When missing a day of work means missing a bill, pain becomes something you try to live with.
Do not wait until the problem becomes an emergency. Look for low-cost clinics, public hospitals, dental schools, charity clinics, government programs, veterans’ services, or payment plans. Even one early visit can keep a small problem from becoming a life-changing expense.
Make health part of survival, not something you deal with only after everything else is handled.
Write down local low-cost clinics, dental options, pharmacies, and government programs before you need them.
I'm an ex Air Force Medic and have worked in Emergency Rooms, ICUs, etc. Now while I'm not qualified to give you medical advice, I can offer you general recommendations. If something hurts, swells, bleeds, changes, or does not go away, do not ignore it for months. Call and ask about cost before you go. Ask if they have payment plans. Ask if they know of assistance programs.
Pride can get expensive when it turns a small problem into an emergency.
Look for HRSA community health centers, county health departments, Medicaid offices, free clinics, dental schools, public hospitals, prescription assistance programs, local health fairs, Veterans Affairs clinics for eligible veterans, and 211 referrals for medical or dental help.
4. Staying in Bad Jobs Too Long
When you have no savings, quitting a bad job can feel more dangerous than keeping it. People with money can say, “Just leave.” Poor people know leaving without a plan can mean eviction, hunger, or losing the only transportation they have.
Do not quit impulsively unless safety is at risk. Build an exit plan while still employed. Apply quietly. Improve one skill. Update your résumé. Talk to people in better workplaces. Save even a small cushion. The goal is not just to escape the bad job. The goal is to land somewhere better.
Give yourself a private deadline. For example: “Within six months, I want a better job.” Then work backward.
Update your résumé. Apply to a certain number of jobs each week. Learn one skill that makes you more valuable. That could be computer basics, driving, customer service, English, bookkeeping, a trade skill, or anything that improves your odds.
Do not tell everyone at work your plan. Move quietly. Bad jobs sometimes punish people who are trying to leave. Keep showing up, keep getting paid, but build your way out one step at a time.
Contact an American Job Center, Goodwill career services, Job Corps for eligible young adults, community colleges, public libraries, adult education programs, local workforce boards, veterans’ employment services, and Dress for Success or similar clothing programs for interview clothes.
5. Missing Bills or Paying Them Late
Many poor people do not pay late because they forgot. They pay late because the money was not there when the bill arrived. Poverty turns the calendar into an enemy.
Contact the company before the bill is late. Ask for a payment arrangement, hardship plan, due-date change, or partial payment option. Pay the bills that protect shelter, transportation, electricity, water, and work first. Avoid silence. Silence usually makes companies less flexible.
Make a simple bill calendar. It does not have to be fancy. Write down every bill, the amount, and the due date.
Then mark which bills are survival bills: rent, electricity, water, transportation, food, medicine, and phone if needed for work.
When money is short, do not hide from the bill. Call early. Tell them what you can pay and when. Get the agreement in writing if possible. I've seen friends that will ignore a car payment, only to have it impounded. They think "oh my gosh, I have to have my car" and pay 3 times more that the original car payment to get it back. They just wasted money they didn't have but somehow figured out how to come up with it.
Also, try to change due dates so bills line up better with paydays. Sometimes one phone call can prevent late fees month after month.
Call 211or visit 211.org. Ask about LIHEAP for utility bills, local community action agencies, Salvation Army assistance, Catholic Charities, United Way partners, St. Vincent de Paul, local churches, and state or county emergency assistance programs.
6. Using Rent-to-Own Stores or Expensive Payment Plans
Rent-to-own is expensive, but it often targets people who cannot qualify for normal credit and cannot pay cash up front. It sells the feeling of relief today while hiding the real cost tomorrow. It feels like a great deal because you pay a small amount each month and if you rent it long enough, you own it. However, you will pay the full cost several times over.
Before signing, ask: “What is the total cost if I make every payment?” Then compare that to buying used, borrowing temporarily, saving for a few weeks, or buying a lower-cost version. Rent-to-own should be a last resort, not a normal way to buy household items.
Create a waiting rule for non-emergency purchases. If the item is not needed for safety, work, food, or health, wait at least 24 hours before signing anything.
Always ask for the total cost, not just the weekly payment. A low weekly payment can hide a terrible deal.
Look for used appliances, community giveaways, family help, repair options, or temporary substitutes. Not having the newest item is better than being trapped in payments you cannot escape.
Check Habitat for Humanity ReStores, Goodwill, Salvation Army, local church furniture banks, Buy Nothing groups, community action agencies, local domestic violence agencies for families starting over, and 211 for household goods programs.
7. Not Saving Money
You cannot build an emergency fund when every month is already an emergency. People love to say, “Just save money,” but they usually say that from a place where there is actually money left to save.
Start painfully small. Even one dollar, five dollars, or ten dollars set aside matters because it creates the habit and gives a tiny bit of breathing room. The first goal is not wealth. The first goal is to avoid needing a loan for every flat tire, prescription, or late bill.
Start with a survival fund, not an investment plan. The first goal might be $25. Then $50. Then $100.
That may not sound like much to some people, but when you are poor, $100 can keep a small problem from becoming a disaster.
Put the money somewhere slightly inconvenient. Not impossible to reach, but not too easy either.
Do not wait until you can save a lot. Save something. Poverty teaches you that nothing matters unless it is big. That is not true. Small amounts are how you begin taking back control.
Look for free budgeting help from nonprofit credit counseling agencies, local credit unions, public libraries, community action agencies, United Way programs, Financial Empowerment Centers if your city has one, and IRS VITA tax-preparation sites so you do not lose refund money to unnecessary fees.
8. Spending Money on Small Pleasures
Sometimes people spend a little money to feel human, give their child a normal moment, or escape constant stress for one evening. Constant deprivation wears people down. A small pleasure can feel like proof that life is more than bills and struggle.
Do not remove all joy, but put limits around it. Create a small “no guilt” amount when possible. That might be a cheap meal, a birthday gift, or a family treat. The danger is not small pleasure. The danger is using pleasure to avoid a crisis that is getting worse.
Make joy part of the budget, but keep it honest. If there is only room for a small treat, then make it small and planned.
Find low-cost ways to feel normal: a home-cooked meal, a park, a movie night at home, a used toy, a walk, a shared dessert, a small family tradition.
Poor families need joy too. The key is not to let temporary relief create long-term damage.
Also, be careful with habits that become expensive: cigarettes, alcohol, gambling, daily fast food, or impulse spending. Those things can quietly drain the little bit of breathing room you are trying to build.
Use public libraries, parks and recreation programs, free museum days, school events, community centers, YMCA financial assistance, Boys & Girls Clubs, church youth programs, food pantries for holiday meals, Toys for Tots, and local Christmas or back-to-school assistance programs.
9. Keeping Unreliable Transportation
Poor people often cannot afford a good car, but they also cannot afford to be without one. An unreliable car can drain money, but no car at all can cost you your job.
Treat transportation as a survival tool. Prioritize repairs that affect safety and getting to work: tires, brakes, battery, lights, oil, coolant, and belts. Avoid cosmetic spending. When possible, build a relationship with an honest mechanic and learn basic maintenance.
Do not wait for the car to completely fail. Make a basic maintenance checklist: oil, coolant, tires, brakes, battery, lights, and warning signs.
Set aside a small transportation fund if possible. Even a little money saved for repairs can prevent panic borrowing.
When repairing the car, separate safety from appearance. A dent can wait. Bad brakes cannot. New rims do not. Poverty requires brutal honesty about priorities.
If the car is becoming a money pit, start planning before it dies. Look at bus routes, carpooling, family options, a cheaper replacement, or jobs closer to home.
Call 211or visit 211.org and ask about transportation assistance. Check community action agencies, local churches, workforce programs, veterans’ organizations, county social services, Medicaid transportation for medical appointments, public transit reduced-fare programs, and local charities that help with car repairs or gas cards.
10. Avoiding Banks or Using Check-Cashing Services
The poor often pay extra just to access their own money. Some people avoid banks because of overdraft fees, bad credit history, minimum balances, or distrust. That distrust may come from experience, not ignorance.
Look for a no-fee or low-fee bank account, credit union, prepaid debit card with low fees, or second-chance checking account. Avoid overdraft protection if it creates fees. The goal is to keep more of your own money and stop paying fees just to cash a check.
Start by adding up how much check-cashing, money orders, prepaid card fees, and transfer fees cost each month. Seeing the number matters.
Then look for a safer place for your money. Credit unions are often better than big banks for people starting over. Ask about no-fee accounts, minimum balances, overdraft rules, and second-chance checking.
Turn off overdraft if it has hurt you before. A declined card is embarrassing, but a $35 overdraft fee can be worse. The goal is not to impress the bank. The goal is to stop losing money to fees.
Check local credit unions, Bank On certified accounts, nonprofit credit counseling agencies, community action agencies, public library financial classes, United Way financial coaching programs, and Financial Empowerment Centers where available.
11. Moving Too Often or Living in Unstable Housing
Housing instability is usually not a lifestyle choice. It is poverty in motion. People move because rent rises, landlords sell, relationships break down, eviction is near, or the place they can afford is not safe or stable.
If possible, stabilize housing before upgrading lifestyle. Keep records of rent payments. Avoid informal agreements when possible. Understand lease terms. Communicate early if rent will be late. Before moving, calculate the real cost: deposit, transportation, missed work, school disruption, utility hookups, and stress.
Treat stable housing like a foundation. Before spending money on wants, protect the roof over your head.
Keep proof of every rent payment. Get receipts. Save text messages. Keep copies of agreements. Poor people often get hurt because everything is verbal and nothing is documented.
If rent will be late, communicate early. Do not disappear. Some landlords are unreasonable, but silence almost always makes things worse.
Before moving, write down the full cost. Not just rent. Include deposit, utilities, transportation, lost work time, school changes, and moving help. Sometimes a cheaper place is not cheaper once all the hidden costs are counted.
Call 211or visit 211.org for rent and eviction-prevention programs. Check HUD housing resources, local public housing authorities, Legal Aid, LawHelp, community action agencies, Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, St. Vincent de Paul, domestic violence shelters if safety is involved, and county emergency rental assistance programs.
12. Giving Up Too Soon — Or Never Trying
That may look like laziness from the outside, but it may actually be exhaustion from years of disappointment. Poverty can teach a person not to hope too much because hope hurts when it keeps getting crushed.
Do not try to fix your whole life at once. Pick one small area where progress is possible: one application, one class, one phone call, one repaired relationship, one saved dollar, one better habit. Poverty can make the future feel impossible, so the first victory is proving that one thing can still move.
Choose one fight at a time. Not twelve. Not your whole life. One.
Maybe the first fight is getting a better job. Maybe it is fixing your license. Maybe it is saving $50. Maybe it is finishing a GED, learning a skill, getting sober, leaving a dangerous relationship, or finally going to the doctor.
Write down the next step so small that you cannot talk yourself out of it. Then do it. After that, write the next one.
Progress does not always feel like victory. Sometimes progress is just not quitting today. Sometimes it is making one phone call you were afraid to make. Sometimes it is showing up again after life has knocked you down.
I know what it feels like to come from a place where the future looks like something other people get to have. But I also know that small steps matter. They may not change everything overnight, but they can change the direction of your life.
Free places to look for help:
Look for support through 211, community mental health centers, churches, peer support groups, public libraries, adult education programs, American Job Centers, Goodwill career programs, Job Corps for younger adults, veterans’ organizations, recovery groups, and local nonprofit counseling services.
Closing Thought
Poor people do make bad decisions sometimes. But the truth is, poverty creates pressure that other people do not always understand. It shortens the timeline. It limits the choices. It makes every mistake more expensive.
The answer is not to shame poor people. Shame does not teach. Shame does not fix a broken car, pay a bill, heal a toothache, or find a better job.
The answer is to understand the pressure, make better decisions where possible, and build a plan one step at a time.
Because sometimes escaping poverty does not begin with one big miracle.
Sometimes it begins with one better decision made under pressure.
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Labels: Bad Decisions, Bad Jobs, Breaking the Cycle, Escaping Poverty, Financial Struggle, Low Income Families, Money Problems, Payday Loans, Poverty, Poverty Help, Poverty Mindset, Rent to Own



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