Car payments have morphed from a temporary nuisance into a permanent part of many peopleâs budgets. Whether thatâs a bad thing depends on what you do with the rest of your money. One-third of millennial car buyers chose a lease last year, which helped push auto lease volume to a record of 4.3 million and 31 percent of all new auto purchases, according to market research by Edmunds.com. âThere is a greater percentage of people who view car ownership as a monthly payment like their cellphone or cable or Wi-Fi,â says Jessica Caldwell, executive director of strategic analytics at Edmunds.com. âItâs just the way we live our lives.â Lease payments are typically lower than monthly loan payments for the same car, and leasing is less expensive than buying new cars every two or three years. But leasing is far from frugal, especially compared with paying off a car within five years and owning it for a few more. People who lease donât get a break from payments or build equity toward the next purchase. But younger buyers in particular are more likely to view cars as technology that needs to be continually upgraded, Caldwell says. âIt used to be cars didnât change that much in five years. Now they do,â she says. Fear of repair bills contributes to the leasing trend as well. Many people would rather have constant payments and continually drive newer cars than be surprised by repair costs â especially in an era when 46 percent of…more detail