Chapter 1
Budgeting Basics
Most people have the wrong idea about budgets. They think theyâre all about eating no-brand ramen noodles in the dark to save money and keeping endlessly detailed records of every penny spent. The real point of a budget is to make sure youâre never in a position where ramen noodles are all you can afford to eat or youâre praying your power doesnât get shut off because you couldnât pay the bill.
In this chapter, weâll expose budgeting myths, take a look at budget reality, and reveal the best way to make this personalized money plan work for you. With this powerful tool, youâll be able to build wealth, meet and exceed your goals, and be ready whenever unexpected financial setbacks occur.
WHAT BUDGETING IS (AND ISNâT)
A Money Plan . . . Not a Magic Potion
The right budget is a game plan for your money that assigns specific jobs to every dollar, whether that job is to pay the electric bill, buy this weekâs groceries, or beef up your 401(k) account. That plan helps you direct cash toward your financial goals, from paying cash for your next car to funding a destination wedding to enjoying a stress-free retirement. A budget lets you decide ahead of time what you want to do with your money instead of spending randomly in ways that undermine your plans and leave you with a mountain of debt.
What budgeting wonât do is magically and instantly solve all of your money problems. Itâs not a quick fix or a perfect formula. But with time and focus it can move you out of a monthly money crunch and toward financial freedom and prosperity.
A Small Leather Bag
The word budget comes to us from fifteenth-century France, where a bougette was a little leather bag or pouch that was used to carry money (sort of like a wallet). After a hundred years or so, the word morphed into budget and began to refer to the money inside the pouch.
Bottom line: a budget tailored to your lifeâas opposed to your life tailored to a budgetâcan help you spend consciously, dig out of debt, and build substantial wealth.
BUSTING BUDGET MYTHS
There are many misconceptions about budgets floating around, and they keep a lot of people from taking control of their money. Donât let these myths get in the way of your financial future. Weâll knock down these false obstacles so you can feel good about creating your money plan.
⢠Myth: Budgets are for other people. Truth: Everyone can benefit from a budget. Paying attention to your finances is the best way to avoid crippling debt and build lasting wealth.
⢠Myth: Budgets are too stressful. Truth: Running out of money every month before your bills are paid, being stuck in debt, and having little or no savings causes anxiety. Budgeting so you can manage your money better will reduce your stress.
⢠Myth: Budgets need to be highly detailed. Truth: Thatâs up to you. You can zoom in and look at each separate line item or zoom out and look at high-level income and expense buckets.
⢠Myth: Budgets mean cutting back on fun. Truth: You wonât feel cutbacks in a budget thatâs right for you. Yes, you may end up trimming some expenses, but thatâs your choiceâand itâs not the only way to reach your financial goals. Budgeting doesnât mean restricting spending; it means spending money on the right things.
⢠Myth: Going over budget blows up everything. Truth: Going over budget is like eating a donut when youâre on a diet. Sure, itâs a mistake, but it doesnât erase everything else youâve been doing. Budgets are flexible, and they grow and change to reflect your needs. Give yourself a break, and do what you can to get back on track.
⢠Myth: Budgets are time hogs. Truth: You can make your budget as time-consuming as you want, including not at all. If you canât (or donât want to) spend time budgeting, work with an app that automatically tracks and updates for you and even lets you set up alerts to keep you from going over budget.
Hereâs the real deal: creating your first budget takes a little work and some time, even if youâre going fully automated with an app. Once thatâs done, following the budget takes nothing but some thought and commitment. Even if youâre not totally ready to stick to a budget, make it anyway. Youâll be surprised how much easier it is to deal with your money.
RICH PEOPLE ALWAYS BUDGET
Making a lot of money and having a lot of money arenât the same thing. The people you might think are rich because of their giant mansions and stable of sports cars often face the same money struggles as people living paycheck to paycheck. Their lives are focused on conspicuous consumption, and theyâre often deep in debt to finance their ârichâ lifestyle.
The Royal Budget
Back in the nineteenth century, only the very rich used household budgets. In fact, some of the earliest historical mentions came from diaries of the royal households of Europe. Kings and princes tracked their holdings and their spending to make sure their wealth wouldnât decline.
People who are in great financial shapeâregardless of their incomeâgot there (and stay there) by budgeting. In fact, youâd be hard-pressed to find an individual with a high net worth who didnât know exactly where his or her money was going. That doesnât mean wealthy people count pennies and track lattes; it just means that they have a plan for their money and are following it. They focus more on saving and investing than on spending to make sure they never go over budget.
THE TRUTH ABOUT TRACKING
If you wonder why thereâs never enough money to get you through the month, thereâs a simple way to find out: track your spending. Knowing exactly what youâre spending money on is the best way to sniff out mindless money habits (and we all have them).
Youâll probably be surprised when you see your spending laid out in front of you, but at least youâll have a crystal-clear picture of where your money really went and not just where you thought it went. For example, you might think you spend $400 a month on groceries when youâre really spending $600. If you only budget for that $400 estimate, youâre destined to have a budget failure. This will also capture things you didnât even realize you were spendingâor overspendingâmoney on, like an old subscription you never thought to cancel.
To track your money, write down or digitally capture every dollar you spend for one month. Include everything, from your $1,800 mortgage payment to the $4 coffee you grabbed on your way into work. Here, savings counts as an expense, so remember to include any money you put into a savings or retirement account (unless it was taken out of your paycheckâdonât include that). Record each expense regardless of whether you pay by cash, check, debit or credit card, automatic payment, or online transfer.
Now you can see where your money is really going and where youâre unintentionally overspending. With that information laid out in front of you, you can decide whether you want to redirect some of that cash in your budget. And thatâs the beauty of budgeting: it gives you the power to choose what you want to do with your money instead of reacting after itâs already gone.
BREAK OUT OF THE PAYCHECK-TO-PAYCHECK CYCLE
One of the main benefits budgeting brings is busting you out of damaging financial cycles, like living paycheck to paycheck. Millions of peopleâincluding high earnersâlive paycheck to paycheck every month, meaning they have no money other than their upcoming take-home pay to count on. That situation makes it impossible to save money and build wealth, and it traps you exactly where you are whether you like it or not. You canât change jobs or move to a new city, for example, when youâre always biting your nails waiting for that next paycheck.
If youâre stuck in this situation, youâre probably turning to credit cards to cover some of your monthly expenses, which makes it even harder to cover next monthâs bills. You are always one emergency away from financial disaster. That constant financial struggle can wreak havoc on your plans and your stress levels. Budgeting can change that.
The way out of the paycheck-to-paycheck problem is to acknowledge it and make some hard temporary changes to your spending. Breaking out of this destructive cycle is difficult, but creating and sticking to a budget will help get you out of it. Once youâre free, there will be room in your budget to build substantial savings, and from there you can turn toward accumulating wealth.
USING YOUR BUDGET TO CREATE WEALTH
Your Very Own âGet Richâ Scheme
The real purpose of a budget is to help you take control of your finances and create personal wealth. Thatâs why multinational corporations and millionaires (and billionaires) alike use them as blueprints to bring in more income and build bigger fortunes. The trick is in how they put their money to work, using shrewd investment strategies to grow that money faster.
This budget focus comes after youâve paid off all of your debt (other than an affordable mortgage) and have a good handle on spending less than you earn. Thatâs because youâll almost always pay more interest on debt than you will earn by investingâa net loss to your overall finances. Once youâre debt-free, you can divert some or all of those retired loan payments toward the future.
Saving and Investing Are Not the Same
People use the terms saving and investing interchangeably, but theyâre not the same thing. Saving means accumulating cash in a secure space where thereâs no risk of loss; itâs money you can count on 100 percent. Investing involves buying something with the hope that it will increase in value and accepting the possibility that it might decrease in value or even become completely worthless.
Accumulating money is just the first part of the plan, and you can build up a tidy nest egg with pure savings. But if you also carefully invest some of your money, you can begin to build serious wealth.
FOCUS FIRST ON SAVING
When youâre consciously directing your dollars, you can send them exactly where you want them to go. By purposefully putting more money into saving, rather than spending on things you donât really need, youâll see your wealth grow consistently. As Warren Buffett says, âDo not save what is left after spending; instead spend what is left after saving.â In time, this strategy will lead to substantially more financial freedom and opportunity.
Saving guarantees that youâll have money when you need it. Every dollar you put into savings is a dollar you will definitely get back. In exchange for that security, the interest youâll earn on savings is generally pretty low; itâs the trade-off for guaranteed safety.
With a focus on savings, youâll be able to build up some cash reserves, including enough cash to begin investing with. Once youâve taken advantage of employer-based retirement savings (more on that in Chapter 3), you can begin to build savings to meet your goals, from creating an emergency fund to saving for a down payment on a house. Tools like the Qapital app are designed for exactly that: helping you automatically direct your money toward specific goals based on your settings. For example, you can direct the Qapital app to round up to the nearest dollar every time you spend money, with the rounding amount moved into the target savings account.
START INVESTING YOUR MONEY
Most peopleâs first experience with investing comes when they have to pick 401(k) funds at work. If you donât know much about investing, getting started can seem intimidating. Figuring out how to choose among millions of investments can be so daunting that it makes you choose no investment at all. And if youâve lived through a sharp market downturn (stock or housing, for example), the fear of losses can keep you from seizing potentially profitable opportunities. Thatâs why itâs important to only invest money you can afford (but donât expect) to lose and to understand every investment you make. A good way to wade into investing is to start with exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or index mutual funds; both offer you the chance to hold an entire portfolio of investments in a single share, and theyâre among the most cost-effective (low-fee) investment options.
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