As featured in The Wall Street Journal, Money Magazine, and more!

Posts tagged as:

budgets

While a budget in one form or another is a must-have financial tool, it’d quickly become big and ugly if you tried to anticipate and include every expense you might run in to. You’d quickly lose interest and wouldn’t stick with your budget, right?

A budget is a basic recorder of recurring expenses, and trying to cover a purchase you didn’t foresee is like fit a round peg into a square hole. Unplanned expenses happen to everyone though, so what we can do about them?

Anticipate the expense

This sounds counter-intuitive to the rest of this post, but you don’t need a magic 8-ball to do it. If you’re aware of the next time your car is going to need an oil change, you can set aside that money in your budget to cover it. That way you don’t step up to the counter to pay for it while wondering where that money is going to come from.

Setting aside $30 or $50 each month for unplanned expenses will help you cover those little repairs or fees you might run into. and you’ll have even more on hand if you don’t use it during the month.

Lock down your emergency fund

This is extremely important. You are the only person who can determine what you consider an emergency, but don’t run for cover the first time you run into a problem. Your emergency fund shouldn’t be the first place you go when you find yourself short a couple of bucks, it should be the last.

Cut back In other areas of your budget

Did you plan for three tanks of gas this month but ended up using only two? Don’t spend that money on just anything, move it over to cover an unexpected expense. If you’re living within your budget, you’ll probably find that you’ll be able to do this quite often. When you have months where everything runs smoothly, you’ll be able to save that cash!

Make extra money

If you’ve got the time and the desire you could earn a couple extra bucks to meet your needs for that month. Are you going to babysit for your neighbor, or have a garage sale? That extra income can help you when you don’t have another way to pay for something.

Find another way

Can you borrow the item you need? If you can get someone to loan you the item you’re considering purchasing, you can keep from incurring another expense. Taking a bit of time to consider your options and see if there’s another way to solve your problem may help you save money.

Unexpected expenses are a major factor of what I call “the month-to-month monster,” living paycheck to paycheck. If you can work to reduce the impact of these purchases on your budget, you’ll be able to strengthen your financial foundation and get to the point where you can begin to establish real wealth.

{ 8 comments }



Today’s podcast features an interview with J.D. Roth from popular blog Get Rich Slowly. J.D. talks with Tom Dziubek and me about how he was inspired to begin writing about personal finance and his decision to leave the corporate world behind and take his passion to the next level.

Tom also speaks with Bryan J Busch from Stop Being Broken. Bryan is a usability expert, and Stop Being Broken is a series of videos pointing out problems with a wide variety of user experiences. One such user experience is the budget, and in this interview, Bryan explains what works for him and his wife. Here is the video and Excel spreadsheet mentioned in the interview.

 

To listen, use the player above (Adobe Flash required), download the podcast here, subscribe to the podcast RSS feed, or use the iTunes link. Note: open links in a new window (Ctrl-click or Command-click) to avoid interrupting the podcast.

[00:00] Introduction from Flexo
[00:48] Interview with J.D. Roth of Get Rich Slowly about following passions
[01:38] — The beginning of Get Rich Slowly
[04:04] — Leaving the box factory to write full-time
[05:50] — The effect of self-employment on social interactions and benefits
[07:37] — How to prepare for leaving a career
[09:07] — Seeking professional advice
[10:30] — The progress of Get Rich Slowly and unforeseen obstacles
[15:12] — Tips that apply to passions other than writing
[16:39] — Pursuing multiple streams of income and the effect of the recession
[19:28] Interview with Bryan J Busch of Stop Being Broken
[20:20] — A family budget system for dual income
[21:41] — Adapting the budget for a single income family
[23:48] — Using joint savings accounts in addition to checking accounts
[25:23] — Alternative approaches to the budget
[27:00] — Automatic transfers based on the budget
[28:44] End

If you have suggestions for the next edition of the Consumerism Commentary Podcast, or reactions to these interviews, feel free to leave a comment here or email your thoughts to podcast at this domain name.

{ 5 comments }

April is National Financial Literacy Month in the United States. In most cases, schools do not extensively teach financial skills. Teenagers, highly susceptible to messages from the media, often do not have guidance from teachers, who are not trained to teach financial skills, or from parents, many of whom do not model healthy financial behavior. This series of articles at Consumerism Commentary serves to help inspire discussion about basic financial concepts. Please feel free to forward this article to someone who might benefit from a basic financial overview.

Forming a budget is a key to taking control of your finances, and they are best begun when you are young. This is the fourth article in the Money Basics series; so far this series has covered checking accounts, savings accounts, and interest.

I will be the first to admit that I don’t like budgets. My personal approach is to review and adjust my spending rather than create spending limits in advance. However, there was a time in my life that budgeting was necessary, and there was a time that I should have focused on a budget but didn’t.

When I was a teenager, I spent some time visiting one of my friends. He had material desires, like many teenagers, but relied on his parents. Often, his requests were met with a common parental response: “I’d love to help you, but it’s not in our budget.” My impression was not that his parents actually kept a formal budget; this response was just an excuse to curtail the collection of useless things. Regardless of the truth behind the words, a budget came to mean a restriction or limitation designed to eliminate fun and the things we want.

It’s true that budgeting, assigning categories to your expenses and deciding how to focus your spending, is not a fun exercise. And I think those who try to make it artificially fun are missing the point. Like bathing and cleaning your house, it’s just something that needs to be done — at least, at first.

Whether your income is from an allowance, a part-time job, or a full-time job, it’s smart to create your own budget. The point of the budget isn’t to curtail fun, it’s to ensure you have the money for fun when you want it. If chores entitle you to $75 a month, you have $75 to split into categories of spending and savings. If you have no required expenses like car insurance or gasoline, you may decide that $40 could be directed towards savings (a good idea) while the remaining $35 can be used for movies, concerts, or anything else you may enjoy. Savings should be the first part of your budget, and with no expenses you could put at least half your income into savings with the rest available for fun.

Budgeting gets more complicated when you have more responsibilities and therefore more expenses. For example, if you own a car you will need to factor in car insurance, gasoline, maintenance and repairs. Suddenly you are not having fun with the money you earn, or at least, not as much of the money you earn. Unfortunately that’s the stigma of budgeting.

Visualize your budgeting

In today’s world of electronic transactions, debit cards, and online access you your bank, it’s quaint to think about placing cash in envelopes with labels. This is a great way to visualize your budget, however. Start with a set of envelopes labeled “savings,” “car” (or “transportation”), “food,” “rent,” “utilities,” “charity” and “fun.” In each of these envelopes, you will place a portion of the income you receive. If you imagine you receive your income in cash at the beginning of each month, this envelope system makes sense. Start by putting 10% of your income directly in your savings envelope. This is a good habit to fall into early.

Rent and utilities are generally predictable expenses that are roughly the same very month. On day one, when you receive your income, place the exact amount of cash you know you will owe for rent and utilities into the appropriate envelopes. After these set expenses, you can decide how to divvy up your cash.

You know you will need to eat throughout the month, so that might be your next focus. It may be harder to imagine how much money you will need for food without tracking your spending for a time, but make a guess for now. Do the same for your transportation envelope. The remainder can be split between charity and fun, but consider beefing up your savings envelope, too.

Don’t seal the envelopes. You will need to remove the money once your expenses are due, but you are also allowed to transfer money from one envelope to another. Going on a road trip? Transfer some money this month from your savings envelope to the transportation envelope. (If you don’t have enough in the savings envelope, it may be a sign that you’re not ready to go on the road trip.) If you eat less this month, you can transfer some cash from the food envelope to another, such as savings or fun.

For your first budget, use a pencil and paper, even if you don’t use actual cash and envelopes. Look at the numbers and get used to working with them, doing simple calculations to make sure you’re spending less than you’re earning and saving at least 10% of your income. A pencil and paper system is great because it’s practically free and completely customizable. There are free online tools that help you budget, like Quicken Online and Mint, but their features can be overwhelming if all you want to do is set up initial flexible guidelines for your spending. Software designed specifically for budgeting, like Mvelopes, You Need a Budget, and PearBudget have thorough features, but you must buy the software or pay a monthly fee for its use. And unless you have room for a budget category called “software,” you may want to skip this in favor of the simpler but just as effective pencil and paper.

Suggestions for advanced budgeting

Here are a few tips I shared when I wrote about taking control of your finances.

Consider the 60% rule. I’m not a fan of rules, but sometimes a guideline can help get you started on the right path. As an individual, you can decide what’s right for you, but sometimes an example helps. The 60% rule suggests that the first 60% of your gross income (before income taxes are taken out) should be designated for your non-discretionary, essential expenses, like housing, food, clothing, and taxes. The rest of the income should be split with 10% going towards savings, 10% towards retirement, and the rest for “fun,” or your discretionary expenses.

Reward yourself for staying under budget. If your budget is realistic — not too difficult nor too easy to achieve — then you should reward yourself when you spend less than you plan. With your “fun” expenses, your spending may be variable month to month and difficult to predict. If you make a conscientious effort to spend less than you expected, perhaps by seeing fewer movies in the theater or cutting back on vacation plans, you have extra money left in your envelope (virtual or otherwise). First, move that excess money to savings. If you don’t perceive savings to be an intrinsic reward, treat yourself to something you’d like.

Use ING Direct’s subaccount feature. Since you can split money in ING Direct’s high-yield savings account into separate buckets, you can label these subaccounts to match your budgeting categories. this lets you earn a decent interest rate while keeping your money organized.

Pay yourself first. No matter what, make sure some of your excess income is diverted to your savings. If you set up direct deposit into your checking or savings account, this will require less work. Your savings envelope contains 100% of your income (minus income taxes) after you are paid, and from there you can distribute funds to your remaining envelopes.

(The following tip is new.)

Budgets are not set in stone. Once you have the process down to a science, don’t be afraid to loosen your grip and introduce flexibility. You can borrow from one category to pay for larger expenses in another, and you can borrow from one month to pay for the next. Just don’t get caught into the trap of borrowing from your future.

{ 7 comments }

This is the next installment in a series at Consumerism Commentary about taking control of your finances. Please consider subscribing to the Consumerism Commentary RSS feed for updates.

It’s no secret that budgeting is a chore. Although this piece of personal finance carries an ugly reputation, even a simple form of budgeting will help you achieve more towards your goal of taking control of your finances. Despite the negativity surrounding budgets in the news — the economic slide is affecting corporate and government budgets and people are depressed everywhere — personal budgeting doesn’t have to be an ugly process.

Why develop a budget? The purpose of budgeting is not to force someone into spending less than a certain amount of money towards a particular category. A budget should be more like a guide. Yes, you can set aside money for a certain type of expense, but if you find you need more, you can “borrow” from another category or future time in which you expect to spend less. This borrowing, like debt, can get out of hand, so it should be limited as much as possible. Keep in mind that budgeting is flexible.

The best way to visualize a budget, particularly if you pay all your expenses with cash, is to use a system of envelopes. To simplify the visualization even further, let’s assume you receive your income on Day 1 of each month, and you must use that income throughout the month until your next paycheck on Day 1 of the following month. When you receive your income, you take the cash left after paying income taxes and place it into envelopes. On the outside of each envelope, write the name of a spending category.

You should have envelopes for rent or mortgage, insurance, food, and utilities. Also consider budgeting for transportation, household, debt repayments, entertainment, and charity. To get a good idea of where you spend your money, take a look at your expenses, which you track every month. Your most frequent spending categories should determine the labels for the envelopes. Use the data to determine the amount of income you require in each category each month. This is the amount of cash you should place in the envelope.

Do not neglect infrequent expenses. You may have certain obligations that are not paid monthly, like property taxes. If you pay $1,200 every six months for property taxes, consider your monthly budget to be one-sixth, or $200. Then left that money accumulate in the envelope for half a year until it is time to pay the bill.

Do you have an envelope for savings? You should. Consider setting this envelope apart from the others, perhaps in front so you will be reminded that it is one of the most important destinations for your cash. Everything not distributed to an expense envelope can be placed into the savings envelope. From here you can take as much as possible to the bank for deposit, invest some of it, and spend a small portion.

Now that you’ve set a budget based on your past or current spending, see if you can find a few places to cut back. Can you reduce your budget by 10%? You may find that this is not as hard as it seems, particularly if you have excess cash to spend on wants rather than needs. Start cutting back with your wants, but also look at your needs to see if they can be reduced. Once you’re familiar with using your budget, you can focus on the future rather than your past spending habits.

When you pay expenses by check, credit card, or debit card, you may find that it’s difficult to effectively use physical envelopes to manage your budget. Although placing cash into envelopes won’t work for everyone, the metaphor can be extended to software. Here are some of the popular choices:

  • Mvelopes is a website that lets you manage your personal finances online. The site focuses on your budget using a virtual envelope system similar to what I’ve described. Fee: $7.90 or more per month.
  • You Need a Budget is a tool you can download to help you organize your budget. Fee: $12 to $50 to download.
  • Intuit Quicken has a budgeting system included but many people find the feature difficult to use. Fee: $45 or more to download with this link (regularly $60 or more).
  • PearBudget is another web-based option that follows the envelope system. Fee: $3 per month.

If nothing else, use the $0.10 option: a pencil and paper. Writing down your budget will help you stick to it, whether you use paper or computer software. I started my first budget with a pencil and paper even though I was inclined towards computers. I was in a transition phase in my life, trying to get myself into financial shape for the first time. After working for a few years out of college, I left my low-paying, high-expense non-profit job and moved back in with family for about four months. I worked out a plan and a budget, found a new job, and by the time I moved out I was in control. Money was still tight, so I stuck close to my budget for a while.

As you see more financial success as a result of spending less and earning more, you may be tempted to move away from your budget. Despite other advice suggesting to always stick to a budget, it’s a good idea to focus less on the categorization and limitation of your expenses as the need decreases By the time you are sufficiently saving and investing money every month, the energy you spend working with a budget could probably be better spent on other activities. But it doesn’t hurt to check in with a budget once in a while. It has been suggested that more confident personal money managers will succeed better with an annual budget. Always keep tabs on your spending, and evaluate the trends, but don’t tie yourself down.

Budgeting, even in the early stages, should not be seen as a burden. Here are some tips to make budgeting easier.

Consider the 60% rule. I’m not a fan of rules, but sometimes a guideline can help get you started on the right path. As an individual, you can decide what’s right for you, but sometimes an example helps. The 60% rule suggests that the first 60% of your gross income (before income taxes are taken out) should be designated for your non-discretionary, essential expenses, like housing, food, clothing, and taxes. The rest of the income should be split with 10% going towards savings, 10% towards retirement, and the rest for “fun,” or your discretionary expenses.

Reward yourself for staying under budget. If your budget is realistic — not too difficult nor too easy to achieve — then you should reward yourself when you spend less than you plan. With your “fun” expenses, your spending may be variable month to month and difficult to predict. If you make a conscientious effort to spend less than you expected, perhaps by seeing fewer movies in the theater or cutting back on vacation plans, you have extra money left in your envelope (virtual or otherwise). First, move that excess money to savings. If you don’t perceive savings to be an intrinsic reward, treat yourself to something you’d like.

Use ING Direct’s subaccount feature. Since you can split money in ING Direct’s high-yield savings account into separate buckets, you can label these subaccounts to match your budgeting categories. this lets you earn a decent interest rate while keeping your money organized.

Pay yourself first. No matter what, make sure some of your excess income is diverted to your savings. If you set up direct deposit into your checking or savings account, this will require less work. Your savings envelope contains 100% of your income (minus income taxes) after you are paid, and from there you can distribute funds to your remaining envelopes.

Please share any budgeting advice or suggestions!

Photo credits: Bill in Ash Vegas, Jeff Keen

{ 4 comments }

For the first time in several years, I decided to design a budget for myself. I’ve never been a fan of budgets. While I used one when absolutely necessary to get myself on track initially, after recovering from low income and high expenses, I decided to ditch the idea when I was comfortable spending significantly less than I was earning. My prevailing thought was, Why restrict myself if I’m managing to spend only on necessities, save for short-term goals, and invest for long-term goals?

Budgeting is great, even necessary, for people living pay check to pay check or if living is otherwise tight. It’s a great tool if it is implemented intelligently and if it is flexible. There’s no reason to beat yourself up if you’re over one category by 10% for example, particularly if you can balance out the difference in another category or in another time period. The budget has to make sense as well. Don’t set the budget too low to reasonably meet or too high to be pointless.

Part of using a budget is reconciling your actual spending against your budgeted spending. I intend to do this on a quarterly basis this year, which will smooth out some of the monthly bumps. As this is the first time I’ve worked with a budget in a long time, I thought it would be a good time to review the first month. Additionally, the MoneyBlogNetwork is encouraging a writing project this month on budgets, so the timing works out well.

Continue reading to see my first Actual vs. Budget report. Click on the thumbnail to zoom in on the data. [click to continue…]

{ 16 comments }

Businesses use budgeting to forecast income and expenses for the year. With a budget, individuals who manage companies’ money will have a decent of idea of how much cash they need at any time of the year to meet the company’s obligations. Personal budgets work the same way. At the beginning of the year, it’s helpful to determine a rough guideline for future spending.

Personal budgets are the most useful for people whose spending approaches or exceeds their income. For people in this situation, sticking to a plan is the most important aspect to improving financial condition. Saving for the future can only take place when the amount spent each year is less than the income earned. Otherwise, debt increases each year. A debt that grows each year is like slavery; more and more of the work you do and the money you earn goes to paying someone else rather than yourself. Additionally, interest expense should generally be unnecessary, unless the cost of debt is less than the income you are generating due to that debt.

It’s best to avoid debt and its expense as much as possible, and a budget can get someone to that point. Budgeting helped me when I quit my low-earning non-profit job. First I took an inventory of my situation and reflected on a few months of income and spending, using the free-at-the-time personal finance software Moneydance. From there, I could take some educated guesses about my future spending, targeting areas where I had to cut back until I could increase my income.

Now that I’m in a better financial position, I argue that a budget is no longer a requirement. One of the most important aspects of personal finance is to spend less than you earn. A budget gets you to that way of living. Once you’re comfortable and once you’ve limited your bad habits, a budget is not as urgent. If you’re watching your spending each month, you can easily adjust without a budget. However, if you are living paycheck-to-paycheck, a budget is going to keep you from getting behind month after month.

In a former job, I prepared “Actual vs. Budget” reports for the company. The areas of the company that provide services to the business units don’t make money from the public. There is little opportunity to earn more money for the company in these areas, so the best way to help the corporation meet its financial goals was to cut costs as much as possible. Thus, vice presidents wanted to review their performance against the budget on a monthly basis.

The Budget WalletThere is a tendency to get carried away with personal budgets. While those living on the edge of spending all their income or more should scrutinize each time they part with their funds, living one’s life chained to a spending plan is unfulfilling. If my income or savings allows for it, I want to be able to overspend. I don’t want a budget that controls me. I don’t want to feel nervous or anxious about spending money because I may be going beyond an arbitrary amount I set for myself months prior.

Therefore, a budget for someone with a solid control of their finances should be a rough guideline. There should be no punishment when spending goes over the plan as long as it’s not indicative of a troubling trend. Budgets should be adjustable. There are many times when life changes come unexpectedly. (Do you have an emergency fund?) It’s not out of the question to discard a budget and start over if circumstances dictate broad changes.

That is the point of view I have decided to take when developing my budget for 2008. I haven’t created one since 2002, and even then, I abandoned it within a year because I managed to get myself in gear within months. Nevertheless, I’ve decided to design a rough personal budget this year. My spending in the past few months has increased, mostly because I was in a position to do so and I had been putting some purchases off for years.

Each month, in addition to my balance sheets and income statements, I will publish an actual vs. budget report. This will help me identify the categories where I consistently “overspend” (according to my own guidelines). Though Quicken helps me do this now, I would say that it is simply too detailed. Rather than the 41 categories I present in my monthly report, and the many more I have in Quicken, my budget reports reduces my spending to a total of 9 non-discretionary and 5 discretionary categories.

I will post my spending plan tomorrow morning.

Image credit: Jeff Keen

{ 3 comments }