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National obsession with stinginess?

 
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malu



Joined: 22 Apr 2007
Posts: 1344
Location: Sunny Java

PostPosted: Thu May 03, 2007 11:17 am    Post subject: National obsession with stinginess? Reply with quote

I'm always paid on time, in full, and it's a decent enough salary. I get a nice house and never have any trouble getting flights home paid for, or expenses reimbursed. No problems there.

My employer seems to be able to take the large costs firmly on the chin - so why, oh why do they fret constantly about such petty little bits of small change? Examples:

1. I've just been asked if I could type my end of semester tests in font size 10 using 2 columns per page so as to minimise pages of photocopying (while the students had better remember to bring their reading glasses).

2. The rate of usage of toilet rolls in my unit has so far been on the agenda of three meetings, that I know of.

3. My school is now going to pass on a Rp3000 bank transfer charge for each salary payment.

My previous employers - not short of a dollar or two themselves - would cheerfully refill shagged-out marker pens and inject ink into printer cartridges during lunchtime.

Why this obsession with nickel-and-dime stuff?
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drgonzo



Joined: 03 Feb 2004
Posts: 82

PostPosted: Thu May 03, 2007 3:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Maybe too many years and lessons from the Dutch? :p
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guruengerish



Joined: 28 Mar 2004
Posts: 424
Location: Australia

PostPosted: Fri May 04, 2007 4:38 am    Post subject: stinginess? Reply with quote

Can't agree with the title of 'stingy'.

1. Westerners use toilet paper. Asians don't. Save money, save the environment and use water.

2. White board markers are not cheap. Refilling pens can save quite a bit.

3. ditto printing inks. In fact the big printer manufacturers rely on folk buying genuine cartridges, which cost half the value of a new printer. A lot of folk I know buy refill kits and refill the cartridges at $3.00 each instead of $25.00. It saves a lot of money. I recently priced a set of genuine cartridges for my Canon and the cost would have been AU$140.00. The new printer was around AU$230.00.
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beefer



Joined: 10 Feb 2006
Posts: 238
Location: java

PostPosted: Fri May 04, 2007 5:53 am    Post subject: Re: stinginess? Reply with quote

guruengerish wrote:


1. Westerners use toilet paper. Asians don't. Save money, save the environment and use water.


.....isn't toilet paper bio-degradable?...i'm not trying to be sarcastic but i always just assumed that it was
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Gurusome



Joined: 29 Jun 2005
Posts: 58

PostPosted: Fri May 04, 2007 8:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Toilet paper goes to the same place as the poo. Hard to believe it can be more toxic than the things that come out of my butt. In some countries, it goes to a sewerage processing plant where they do magical things to make the water reuseable for irrigation or (for example, in London) drinking.

The paper is biodegradable, but the bleaches and perfumes and other chemicals do tend to get into the environment and food chain, especially in places where the sewerage goes straight to the river or ocean.

So washing is better than wiping. Except there's never anything to dry yourself on (if you're not at home), and I hate having to pull my pants on over a wet butt.

I agree with the ink thing. My $69 printer takes a $65 cartridge. It's a scam.

I'm more amused by the people who spend hours cutting the paper napkins in half. Which just means you have to use twice as many, since the paper disintegrates upon contact with water. Indonesia has the toughest plastic and the weakest paper in the world.

My school complained about us using too much washing powder, which is odd because most of us bought our own and did our own washing because the stuff the maids were using was crap. They employed a sort of creative stinginess at one of the schools where they gave us free coffee, but rarely had coffee, sugar and creamer all at the same time. The other school had properly brewed coffee, though, and this tiny gesture did great things for staff morale.
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guruengerish



Joined: 28 Mar 2004
Posts: 424
Location: Australia

PostPosted: Sun May 06, 2007 12:36 am    Post subject: one-upmanship? Reply with quote

Talking of penny-pinching, I'm not trying to be one up on you, but EF Yogya when I got there had one toilet for the entire school (the 2nd had been out of order for months).

Staff and hundreds of students had to compete to get in there between classes.

The school had a "school towel" and a school "tea towel", which were washed each night and put out next day. The tea towel was used for wiping benches, cleaning glasses and drying dishes, and by mid-afternoon was looking pretty crappy.

I would drop the towel in the bin at this stage, and eventually a 2nd one was purchased.

After a heated staff meeting, it was agreed by management that a staff toilet would be built, and it was!

I never saw the owner's house, but I suspect it had more than one of everything. Crying or Very sad
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nasigoreng



Joined: 20 Feb 2003
Posts: 41
Location: sailing the seas of cheese

PostPosted: Sun May 06, 2007 6:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Indonesians may not use a lot of toilet paper but their overuse and reckless disposal of plastic bags is far worse for the environment.

Talk about stingy... these people are too lazy to make an effort to dispose of their garbage in a place farther than they can throw it.
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tanyakenapa



Joined: 06 Feb 2007
Posts: 180
Location: Batavia

PostPosted: Mon May 07, 2007 3:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The Indonesians probably wouldn't call it stingy.. or Pelit in Bahasa.. they will just see it as trying to save money on things they would consider not very important. And give it another name.. hmmm maybe ngirit (saving) umm maybe thats the slang word... ummm hemat biaya maybe.. saving on costs...they would never call it PELIT..they'd be soo insulted hehehe.....

I think its just the clash of western and Indonesian cultures. And no matter how hard westerners try to change their way of thinking..it will never work. Bad habits die hard.

As for the rich Indonesians, even tho they are rich and buy BMW'S or whatever, they will always try and save money but its on the things they dont see as important to them personally. I reckon its just the typical way of thinking in Indonesia.

Its just the way they are.... in my own opinion...
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malu



Joined: 22 Apr 2007
Posts: 1344
Location: Sunny Java

PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2007 10:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

At my local Carrefour you can get 2 hrs free car parking (a whole THREE THOUSAND RUPIAH) if you spend more than a certain amount on groceries. You would be astonished just how long whole families of wealthy chinese BMW owners will stand in a disorderly queue in order to take full avantage of the offer.

I swear these guys would spend a dollar on a torch to search for a cent they had dropped.
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basiltherat



Joined: 04 Oct 2003
Posts: 952

PostPosted: Tue May 08, 2007 2:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Was just thinking. There is a Philanthropist association in Indonesia but it seems to be pretty 'weak'; Indonesian Philanthropic Association (no website) Very Happy.

One of the most populous nations in the world