william schmaltz
WKR
There’s levels to everything. You are correct for some broke and impulsive 20 year old or someone with the keeping up with the Jones’ syndrome. I suppose those are the folks that are paying for the benefits of those of us who have never paid a cent interest. I use mine in place of a debit card. It automatically gets paid a week before the due date. I buy what I need or have already planned and that’s it. I’ve never thought “so glad I have my CC today so I can afford this” or ever bought anything with a CC I would’ve otherwise used cash for. Absolutely have never justified a purchase because it’s 3% “off” or because it meant more air miles.You may not pay interest and get a few bucks back, but I guarantee you most if not all of you are spending money you wouldn't otherwise to garnish those peanuts. It encourages spending. Why do you think those programs exists? You think you are smarter than the CEO's getting 50 million/yr? I think not.
When I was on an AK Air flight a couple days ago they had a commercial to use inflight entertainment where the premise was “I need to buy these expensive things so I’m closer to my free trip to Hawaii.” So you’re absolutely right that they market it and get probably millions of people that way. They were very clear on that.
My wife just traveled with two kids. We paid full price for her ticket, $100 companion fare for second, and used miles for the third. What would’ve cost $1800+ was about $700. So $1000+ savings and we do that twice a year. At minimum I go to Bethel 2x a year and Kodiak 1x for personal stuff. Total for those three round trips is usually 30k miles and about $30. Often times my whole family joins or just my wife. So that’s another $1-2k+ savings. My family will also join me on Seattle work trips using miles. I guess I’m not going to just leave $3-4k+ in flight savings on the table every year. It costs me ~$100 in annual fees and in over a decade we’ve never gave them a penny of interest.