Posts filed under 'Debt Reduction'

The Dilbert Guide to Personal Finance

Scott Adams, the cartoonist behind the popular Dilbert cartoon, is an excellent manager of his own personal finances. He intended to write a humorous book about personal finance but decided he could never write enough to fill more than a page. According to Adams, everything you need to know about financial planning boils down to these eight principles:

  • Make a will.
  • Pay off your credit cards.
  • Get term life insurance if you have a family to support.
  • Fund your 401(k) to the maximum.
  • Fund your IRA to the maximum.
  • Buy a house if you want to live in a house and you can afford it.
  • Put six months’ expenses in a money market fund.
  • Take whatever money is left over and invest 70% in a stock index fund and 30% in a bond fund through any discount broker, and never touch it until retirement.

Via Vanguard

8 comments July 27th, 2006

Self-Debt

For those of you that are in the habit of paying yourself a portion of your income each month (hopefully for the purpose of investing and growing your wealth), I have a question. What do you do if there is some financial emergency during the month that makes it impossible to pay yourself a portion of that month’s income?

For example, one month my car died and I had to replace the engine. I used the money in my checking account - not savings - to cover the expense, but was then unable to pay myself 20% of that month’s income (20% is what I try to pay myself each month). My budgeting system still shows that I owe myself for that month and I intend to pay it off as my checking account recovers from the car expense. I would like to hear what others do in similar situations. Do you keep a running self-debt balance or do you just forget that month and start paying yourself next month when cash isn’t as tight?

3 comments June 27th, 2006

The Real Value of Money

Lee Eisenberg has an excellent thought about the value of money.

The greatest uncertainty of all may be the uncertainty over what money is good for. We bury this uncertainty under a million cliches. Money can’t buy happiness. Oh, no? Money can buy time and opportunity to do the things we most love. It can help us fulfill our obligations as parents to our kids and as kids to our parents. It buys quality health care. But somehow or other, we get our knickers all twisted up when it comes to figuring out the real value of money. Could it be that in the end the reason we don’t plan is because we don’t have anything meaningful to plan for?
— Lee Eisenberg, The Number

Via: Debtspiration.com

Add comment May 30th, 2006

Frugality and a Better Life

A comment on our last post, Winning on the margins, brought up a very interesting topic.

“You still have to balance [frugality] with living a nice life though. Winning for the sake of winning, or being frugal for the sake of being frugal will probably not lead to a better life. Living a life where you express yourself and achieve your goals through reaching your highest potential probably will, but it is not necessarily the same thing.”

So, what’s the point of being frugal if it doesn’t lead to a better life? I’d argue that frugality, in its correct form, will undoubtedly lead to a better life. The purpose of frugality is to manage your money in a way the enables you to create wealth. Overtime, you can begin relying more on your wealth for income instead of a job. Being frugal for that purpose creates self-control and freedom from financial stress - both of which lead to a better, happier life. Frugality does NOT mean being a selfish miser with your money who hordes it just for the sake of not spending it.

There is another statement in that comment that brings up another great point:

“You still have to balance [frugality] with living a nice life…”

I really agree with that. There are many things in life that may not bear financial fruits, but are definitely worth spending money on. You could learn a new language; learn to play a sport, or a musical instrument. You could move to a struggling country for a while and volunteer your time and talents to help less privileged people. Things that add to your personal development and build character are most likely worth the expense. I would say be frugal when it comes to consumer goods. The value they add to our lives is debatable compared to the financial burdens they can create.

Add comment May 17th, 2006

Cash Flows vs. Account Balances

What’s more important - having a large bank account balance or a healthy positive cash flow each month? I’m sure both are important, but which one should we focus our attention on when budgeting? Should we budget and plan based on money in our bank accounts? If I want a new plasma TV that costs $2,000 and I have $8,300 in my bank account, I could make that purchase stress-free right?

The amount in a bank account is the least important factor when making expenditure decisions. To increase our wealth and achieve independence, the primary factor we need to control, manage and think about is our cash flow. If I’m spending $100 more than I make each month, buying a $2,000 TV is a bad idea, even with $8,300 in the bank. In a negative cash flow situation, that balance will quickly diminish and with it the false sense of security it created.

Too often, we buy something or make a big financial decision based on the amount of money we currently possess and then find ourselves frustrated later on when we realize we aren’t progressing financially. In the words of Robert Kiyosaki, we’re stuck in the rat race! If we aren’t carefully tracking our monthly in-goes and out-goes we don’t have enough information to make sound financial decisions. The only way to increase our wealth and get out of the race is to manage our cash flows, i.e., spend less than we make and intelligently invest the positive cash flow.

8 comments April 28th, 2006

Festival of Frugality #18

This week’s Festival of Frugality is up and being hosted by the Canadian Capitalist. Check it out.

Add comment April 11th, 2006

Debtspiration.com

There is an excellent new site called Debtspiration.com. It posts motivational quotes each day from various authors about reducing your debt and increasing your savings.

“We hope our collection of ideas and quotes motivates and educates others, nudging them to reduce debt and grow savings. We hope it encourages you to seek out more information and knowledge regarding all aspects of personal finance.”

2 comments April 8th, 2006

Changing Behavior

Does using financial management software make you wealthier? Does budgeting eliminate debt? The answer is no, of course not. These are just tools that help you track where your money comes from and where it goes. Software and budgets only help you become wealthier as they change your behavior. Using those tools alone will do nothing if they don’t provide an incentive for you to improve your financial habits.

In 37signals‘ new book, Getting Real, they hit the nail on the head when they said:

“If it doesn’t change your behavior, then it just doesn’t matter.”

The financial tools we use should enhance our lives, not drain our time and create more clutter. Finance software should be really good at one thing - providing an incentive to increase wealth. (Is there really any other reason we’d spend so much time scrutinizing our finances?) In regards to the time we devote to our finances, we should waste less time trying to understand all the “bells and whistles” of our finance software and more time thinking about how to spend less and invest more of our money.

Sources: Getting Real book

1 comment March 30th, 2006

Law of Lost Attention

Scott Berkun, a project management and product design consultant, writes about the importance of being frugal; not with money, but with our attention. He explains in his essay, Attention and Sex, that we determine the value of something by deciding how much attention we devote to it.

Law of lost attention: The value of something you spend attention on is dependent on how much attention you spend on it.

I feel this if very applicable to personal finance, entrepreneurship, or anything we wish to improve or succeed at. If financial independence is a high priority, are we devoting enough of our attention to our finances so that goal becomes a reality? We can ask that question about any ambition we have to determine if it is really valuable to us.

This is an excellent lesson for me because the time I spend on the important things in my life is often at the mercy of several less important things I try jamming into my day. Learning to focus my attention on the worthwhile will bring me the success I seek. In our day and age of mult-tasking, we divide our attention over many trivial things, and focus less on the things that will bring satisfaction and meaning.

“There isn’t a single great work in the history of civilization, no novel, symphony, film, or song that was completed as a 1/5th time-slice between e-mail, IM, cellphones and television.”

Sources: Attention and Sex

2 comments March 24th, 2006

Wisdom from Ben Franklin

This year marks the 300th birthday of United States Founding Father Ben Franklin, who was born on January 17, 1706. A printer, statesman, and inventor, he was famous among other things for sayings such as “Time is money” and “A penny saved is twopence clear” (”A penny saved is a penny earned”).

He loved Boston, where he was born, and Philadelphia, where he worked and lived, so when he died in 1790 he left each city a sum of $4,400 (£1000) with the condition it remain invested for 200 years. When the cities cashed out the investment in 1990, each sum was worth more than $7 million, a testament to the power of compound interest. (These investments weathered the Great Depression!)

Get out of debt as soon as possible, so compound interest isn’t working against you, then start getting compound interest on your side. The sooner you save, the more you’ll have in the end.

Sources: Vanguard, Wikipedia

2 comments March 20th, 2006

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