Sometimes the problem isn't complicated—it's just expensive. That was the takeaway when a 27-year-old Texas man named Jesse called into The Ramsey Show looking for help with his family's mounting debt.
Jesse stays home with two young kids while his wife earns $60,000 annually. Between them, they've racked up roughly $100,000 in debt: about $60,000 in student loans, $27,000 for a car, and the rest on credit cards. He wanted to know how they could dig out.
The Car Problem
Personal finance host Dave Ramsey didn't need long to spot the issue. "You don't drive a $27,000 car with a $60,000 income," he said flatly. To Ramsey, the vehicle wasn't just a line item—it was a symbol of misaligned priorities. The couple had bought something they couldn't afford, and now it was dragging them under.
Ramsey pressed for details. Jesse broke down the numbers: student loans accounted for the bulk of the debt, the car loan came in second, and credit cards filled the gaps. Ramsey's verdict was blunt: "You got a car you can't afford."
A Math Problem, Not A Values Problem
Co-host John Delony joined in, pointing out that Jesse's stay-at-home dad role wasn't financially sustainable under these circumstances. This wasn't about questioning family values or the importance of parenting—it was about the numbers not working. "You're facing a math problem," Delony said.
Both hosts argued that keeping the $27,000 car while carrying $100,000 in debt wasn't protecting the family—it was harming it. Ramsey warned that the very thing Jesse wanted to preserve, a stable family life, was being eroded by the financial pressure. Delony added that the household was likely becoming "a stressful, chaotic place" because of the unresolved debt.
The solution, they said, was straightforward: sell the car, use the proceeds to knock down debt, and switch to a cheaper vehicle until the family could breathe again.
The Path Forward
Ramsey laid out a plan. Jesse should keep his evening delivery gig but also pick up full-time work during the day. The goal: clear most of the debt as quickly as possible, even if it meant a grueling schedule for a while.
Delony pushed back on Jesse's assumption that his earning ceiling was the $2,400 a month he used to make working at a grocery store meat market. He urged Jesse to aim higher and find better-paying work.
Ramsey acknowledged the path wouldn't be easy. "There's no avoiding pain here," he said. But the choice was between accepting short-term discomfort now or letting financial chaos continue to dictate the terms. He encouraged Jesse to "strap on a tool belt" and commit to the cleanup.
The message was clear: The car had to go. The debt had to shrink. And Jesse had to work—a lot—until the family's finances stabilized. Not because staying home with kids isn't valuable, but because the math simply didn't add up yet.