Nothing so undermines your financial judgement as the sight of your neighbor getting rich.
– J. P. Morgan
I guess that the mustachian problem is then to not let your neighbor see your wealth. :)
Nah, the MPP is that your neighbors want to donate their used things to you because you don't have anything!!
Oh, goodness, this has happened many times to us. We have more income than most of the people in our circles, but with the exception of our house, we live pretty frugally. Our two cars average 20 years old and 230,000 miles, we don't have fancy clothes, etc.
About a month ago, I mentioned to a coworker that we were looking to acquire a third car for those cases where our family is going three different directions, and my coworker
gave us an old car they're not using. Said coworker makes a lot less money than us.
Sure, the car is old and needs some work, but I can handle that. It's quite rusty, and some maintenance has been deferred, and couple things are broken. But we only need it temporarily (hopefully less than a year), so it's no big deal to leave the busted rear sway bar alone, and ignore the missing springs to un-recline the seats. I've spent about $150 changing fluids, replacing a power steering hose and a brake line, and gearing up to change the transmission fluid and filter.
This brings me to my MPP: The trouble is that I live in the great, grasping state of Illinois, where no tax hike is sufficient to satisfy the gaping maw of public pensions and decades of poor fiscal management. It's going to cost me $150 to transfer the title, $151 to register it, and $25 in sales taxes. I'm literally going to spend twice as much on compliance costs as I'm going to spend on the actual car.