Suppose you’ve just learned how to do your taxes. You estimate that it will take up about two hours of your time if you did it yourself. Your cousin, who happens to love doing taxes, offers to do it for you for $50, with a free tub of ice cream.
If you rejected your cousin’s offer, you’d save yourself $50. But it’d cost you two hours of your time doing whatever you wanted, the actual work of doing your taxes. If you took your cousin’s offer, you'd be getting your taxes done for you. Of course, you’d have to pay her $50 — that’s the cost.
Depending on how much you valued your time, and how much yo
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The idea is part of this collection:
Learn more about moneyandinvestments with this collection
The impact of opportunity cost on personal and professional life
Evaluating the benefits and drawbacks of different choices
Understanding the concept of opportunity cost
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Similar ideas to Opportunity cost and time
We think of our opportunity cost if we decide to do something, fearing it is hampering our options and time, so we stay in limbo unable to decide on what to do.
Life is meant to be an experience, not something you plan and keep doing repeatedly.
Divide your total money earned by your total time spent.
For example, let’s say you spend 2,500 hours per year earning money:
We all have some idea of how much our time is worth. On extreme ends, it is easy to know if a task is worth your time. For instance, if someone offers you $0.07 per hour and another $7,000 per hour, you would have no problem to decide.
However, in the middle of the time-value spec...
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