The Scottish Mail on Sunday

ME AND MY MONEY I confess! I have a shoe habit . . . and spent £500 at the airport on Gucci sandals

Before lockdown, Julia Hobsbawm loved a nail manicure. Here, she reveals another guilty secret

-

AUTHOR and commentato­r Julia Hobsbawm says the best money decision she ever made was buying her first home, a one-bedroom flat in Camden, North London, for just £40,000.

Hobsbawm, who is feeling the financial effects of the coronaviru­s on her income, also reveals she has a shoe habit and is used to treating herself every fortnight to a manicure at a nail salon frequented by supermodel Kate Moss.

The 55-year-old, speaking to DONNA FERGUSON, lives with husband Alaric. Her latest book, The Simplicity Principle: Six Steps To Clarity In A Complex World, is published by

Kogan Page.

Q Has your business been hit by coronaviru­s?

A I RUN two micro-businesses and both have been significan­tly affected. The first is my writing and speaking business – we’ll just have to wait and see what the speaker circuit has to offer me this year.

The other is a network business, Editorial Intelligen­ce, which is 15 years old this year. It was not such a great 15th birthday present to have to cut back substantia­lly on activity for the time being. But being an entreprene­ur, I am used to ups and downs – although I have never experience­d a shutdown like this, obviously. Q What did your parents teach you about money? A MY parents valued ideas and culture more than money. But then, they had the luxury of not being poor. My dad was the historian and academic Eric Hobsbawm while my mother Marlene was a music teacher. I grew up in a household full of ideas and classical music.

We were not in any way upwardly mobile but I didn’t ever feel money was tight – because it wasn’t. I’d say I was a typical middle-class child who never thought about money because I never had to. My parents did tell me to get Saturday jobs and a paper round early on, which made me value work as much as money. It was a lesson I’m still grateful for.

Q What was the first paid work you ever did?

A I WORKED in a local bakery on Saturdays as a teenager. I can’t remember how much I got paid but I do remember thinking whatever I took home was a small fortune because I had never previously had any money of my own. Pocket money was pretty limited in our house.

Q Have you ever struggled to make ends meet?

A YES and no. I have never been in poverty, but I have been an entreprene­ur for the past 30 years, responsibl­e for the bulk of my family’s income. So yes, there have been times I have struggled when uncertaint­y and difficulty made the ‘market’ drop and I have worried about how to keep my business going. In that sense, the coronaviru­s crisis is not the first time I have had to plan for better times.

Q Have you ever been paid silly money?

A YES. When my previous book was published in 2016, I started to get noticed on the speaker circuit and my agent was able to ask for nice sums of money. The best example was when I was flown business class to Milan and provided with a hotel suite entirely made of marble on top of my fee. I see that hotel room as ‘silly money in kind’.

Q What was the best year of your financial life?

A LAST year, mainly due to my work on the speaker circuit. But I can honestly say I don’t judge my life or measure myself by what I earn. I don’t think you can if you do two of the most unpredicta­ble things in life for a living: writing and being an entreprene­ur.

Q The most expensive thing you bought for fun?

A THE most beautiful pair of beige Gucci sandals with kitten heels and a red and blue strap. They cost £500 and were an impulse purchase at an airport.

Totally unnecessar­y and I adore them. I have to admit: I have a shoe habit.

Q What is your biggest money mistake?

A TRUSTING someone else’s word. In business, there are always people who pull out of contracts when on the brink of becoming clients.

My biggest mistake has been to believe people when they say ‘the contract has just hit a snag but it’s coming’.

Q The best money decision you have made?

A BUYING my first property near Camden Lock in London the minute I had my first fulltime job, in 1985. It was a onebedroom flat and I think I paid about £40,000. Inevitably, buying property proved a good investment and enabled me to buy the house that I have now lived in for 20 years.

Q Do you save into a pension?

A YES I do. It is not something I paid much attention to until recently when the Government and my financial adviser recommende­d I did so. Like a lot of people, I am more of a spender than a saver.

Q Do you invest directly in the stock market?

NO. I think investing in the stock market should be left to the experts. It’s not something I have done or ever wanted to do. I do not have the patience or the instinct for it.

Q Do you own any property?

A YES, I own my home, a large terrace house in North London. We took out a mortgage with Northern Rock 20 years ago so we could add an extension. That had its scary moments but luckily we switched our mortgage just before the bank was bailed out.

Q What is the one little luxury you treat yourself to?

A I AM not someone who likes beauty treatments with one exception: nails. Before coronaviru­s, I had them done every fortnight for £40 at the same nail parlour in Highgate, North London, that Kate Moss uses.

We were once there at the same time and giggled because the young assistant had not heard of David Bowie. Q If you were Chancellor what is first thing you would do? A PRETTY much everything Rishi Sunak is already doing, although I would offer more support to the self-employed and those who are on zero-hours contracts. Generally, I think this Chancellor is stepping up to the plate, big time.

Q Do you donate money to charity?

A YES. I’m a founding trustee of a charity, Our Brain Bank, which uses technology to try to overcome glioblasto­ma, the most deadly cancer.

 ??  ?? SOLE TRADER: Entreprene­ur and author Julia Hobsbawm and, left, the Gucci footwear she loves
SOLE TRADER: Entreprene­ur and author Julia Hobsbawm and, left, the Gucci footwear she loves

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom