logo

Quotes About Savings

I want to drive down health care costs.
~ Chris Gibson
We should expand health savings accounts so people can save in a tax-advantaged way for more routine healthcare needs.
~ Ted Cruz
The more things you make from scratch, the less expensive and usually healthier and tastier.
~ Gil Marks
a pension is a delayed payment for work already done. This is the most fundamental truth about pensions, and it is almost never said.
~ George Lakoff
If you made a list of Hilda's remarks throughout the day, you'd find three bracketed together at the top—'We can't afford it', 'It's a great saving', and 'I don't know where the money's to come from'.
~ George Orwell
A part of all you earn is yours to keep. It should be not less than a tenth no matter how little you earn. It can be as much more as you can afford. Pay yourself first.
~ George S. Clason
a part of all I earned was mine to keep.
~ George S. Clason
Every gold piece you save is a slave to work for you. Every copper it earns is its child that also can earn for you.
~ George S. Clason
had declared himself an egg merchant. If thou select one of thy baskets and put into it each morning ten eggs and take out from it each evening nine eggs, what will eventually happen?     It will become in time overflowing.     Why?     Because each day I put in one more egg than I take out.     Arkad turned to the class with a smile. Does any man here have a lean purse?     First they looked amused. Then they laughed.
~ George S. Clason
I tell you, my students, a man's wealth is not in the coins he carries in his purse; it is the income he buildeth, the golden stream that continually floweth into his purse and keepeth it always bulging. That is what every man desireth. That is what thou, each one of thee desireth; an income that continueth to come whether thou work or travel.
~ George S. Clason
He who takes advice about his savings from one who is inexperienced in such matters, shall pay with his savings for proving the falsity of their opinions.
~ George S. Clason
una parte de todo lo que gano me revierte y la he de conservar.
~ George S. Clason
1. Start thy purse to fattening 2. Control thy expenditures 3. Make thy gold multiply 4. Guard thy treasures from loss 5. Make of thy dwelling a profitable investment 6. Insure a future income 7. Increase thy ability to earn
~ George S. Clason
Nonsense," reproved Kobbi, "a man's wealth is not in the purse he carries. A fat purse quickly empties if there be no golden stream to refill it. Arkad has an income that constantly keeps his purse full, no matter how liberally he spends." "Income, that is the thing
~ George S. Clason
a man's wealth is not in the purse he carries. A fat purse quickly empties if there be no golden stream to refill it. Arkad has an income that constantly keeps his purse full
~ George S. Clason
A fat purse quickly empties if there be no golden stream to refill it. Arkad has an income that constantly keeps his purse full, no matter how liberally he spends.
~ George S. Clason
UNA PARTE DE LO QUE GANAS ES TUYA PARA QUEDARTE CON ELLA.
~ George S. Clason
a man's wealth is not in the coins he carries in his purse; it is the income he buildeth, the golden stream that continually floweth into his purse and keepeth it always bulging.
~ George S. Clason
He who takes advice about his savings from one who is inexperienced    in such matters, shall pay with his savings for proving the falsity of their opinions.
~ George S. Clason
La riqueza, como el árbol, nace de una semilla. La primera moneda que ahorres será la semilla que hará germinar el árbol de tu riqueza. Cuanto antes siembres, antes crecerá el árbol. Cuanto más fielmente riegues y abones tu árbol, antes te refrescarás, satisfecho, bajo su sombra.
~ George S. Clason
A PART OF ALL YOU EARN IS YOURS TO KEEP. It should not be less than a tenth no matter how little you earn.
~ George S. Clason
a man's wealth is not in the purse he carries. A fat purse quickly empties if there be no golden stream to refill it.
~ George S. Clason
A part of all you earn is yours to keep. It should be not less than a tenth no matter how little you earn. It can be as much more as you can afford. Pay yourself first. Do not buy from the clothes-maker and the sandal-maker more than you can pay out of the rest and still have enough for food and charity and penance to the gods.
~ George S. Clason
This, then, is the second cure for a lean purse. Budget thy expenses that thou mayest have coins to pay for thy necessities, to pay for thy enjoyments and to gratify thy worthwhile desires without spending more than nine-tenths of thy earnings.
~ George S. Clason