Spending Like It’s 2019

Setting spending targets and using budgeting apps can help tame the urge to live it up (now that we can again).

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(Image credit: Getty Images)

For the introverted and the frugal, the pandemic has offered a welcome reprieve from the social pressures to go out and spend money. Although I am grateful for the vaccine, easing travel restrictions and the renewed freedom to safely gather with friends and family, I’ll admit that the return to social life at first was a bit of a shock, not in the least to my wallet.

During the pandemic, the savings rate soared. But after hitting a 45-year high in April 2020, the rate began to decline in 2021 and will likely settle near its historic average in 2022, says Elizabeth Renter, data analyst for NerdWallet.com, a consumer website.

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Emma Patch
Staff Writer, Kiplinger's Personal Finance

Emma Patch joined Kiplinger in 2020. She previously interned for Kiplinger's Retirement Report and before that, for a boutique investment firm in New York City. She served as editor-at-large and features editor for Middlebury College's student newspaper, The Campus. She specializes in travel, student debt and a number of other personal finance topics. Born in London, Emma grew up in Connecticut and now lives in Washington, D.C.