Tag Archives: Savings

2010 Action Plan #1: Control Your Spending

In recent times, while speaking to several persons about their money problems, I have detected a growing sense of desperation in their voices. Although many have not yet reached a stage of full-fledged panic, it is obvious that they are very worried about the current financial situation facing Jamaica.

“If I can’t make ends meet now,” a client asked perplexedly, “what’s going to happen to me when the full impact of the tax increases hits?”

I believe that good results can come out of every bad situation. The prevailing economic crisis has forced many of us to recognise that we can no longer be nonchalant or clueless about our financial condition. We have received a monetary wake-up call – it’s now time to take control of our finances!

Over the next three weeks, I will share with you an action plan that will help you to survive in these times, and set yourself on the right track to long-term financial success. Continue reading 2010 Action Plan #1: Control Your Spending

No Regrets

Recently, my 25-year-old niece shared with me some of the strategies she was using to secure her financial future. She explained that she had rejected the credit-card consumption culture that was so prevalent in the United States, by only buying things that she could afford.

Saving a good portion of her salary was her main aim, as she wanted to amass a significant down payment before she bought her own home.

Although I was filled with pride as I listened to her reveal her smart money habits, I couldn’t help but reflect on my own financial history, which was quite the opposite. When I was 25, my income was inadequate, my debt was distressing, and my net worth was nonexistent. Continue reading No Regrets

Celebrating the Holidays When You’re Broke

As one of my favourite Yuletide songs proclaims, “It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas.” It’s hard to escape the commercial manifestations of the holidays – aggressive advertisements, sparkling shops and tempting trinkets – all screaming at us to “Buy, Buy, Buy!”

Many people who would normally jump wholeheartedly into the seasonal spending spree can only look on from the sidelines as spectators, as their bank accounts reflect the current economic crunch. Other persons have decided to throw caution to the wind by declaring that it’s business as usual this year.

Armed with partner draws, overseas remittances, or credit cards dangerously close to their limits, some shoppers are living on the edge by spending more than they can really afford.

How can you balance your desire to participate in the holiday festivities, if you’re strapped for cash and your financial reality dictates frugality at this time? Continue reading Celebrating the Holidays When You’re Broke

Don’t Stop Spending!

A call for persons to spend more might seem like very strange advice for a financial coach to give in these challenging economic times. The typical recommendation for weathering this tough economy is to cut back on consumption by buying only the basic necessities and channeling as much money as possible into savings.

First, let me qualify my comments by indicating that my discussion on the merit of spending is not intended for persons who are in unmanageable debt or unable to make ends meet. If you are in that position (as too many of us are) then you need to focus your attention on aggressively reducing your liabilities and earning more money to cover your budgetary needs.

However, a fear of all the gloom and doom surrounding the global recession has prompted some consumers who are financially capable of maintaining their normal buying habits, to choose to keep their money close to home instead. Continue reading Don’t Stop Spending!

Stop Making Excuses about Saving

As a personal finance advisor, I can only show my clients the cold, hard realities of their financial lives and give them strategies for improvement; but until they are ready to make the necessary changes, I really can’t help them become financially successful.

After learning the secrets of managing, multiplying and maintaining money, it became my mission to pass on the good news to all. At first I was naïve in believing that once people understood how to transform their finances, they would quickly adopt key principles such as budgeting, saving and debt management.

Very soon I realised that it would not be quite that easy to influence some people’s personal finance habits. Even if they recognised that their negative practices would lead to their financial ruin, it was often difficult for them to change bad habits and do things differently.

Some people remain in financial challenges because they are quick to offer reasons why suggested solutions to their problems can’t possibly work. The need to save regularly is an area that is particularly prone to imaginative excuse-making. Here are some common excuses: Continue reading Stop Making Excuses about Saving

Can Earning More Make You Poorer?

“I’m really distressed about my financial situation. Although I’m earning twice as much as I did a year ago, now every month I’m broke right after payday, and I’m in serious debt. What am I doing wrong?”

Most people desire to make more money so that they can improve their finances. It seems practical to think that if we get additional income, our money troubles should disappear. So why is it that so many of us retain less money when we earn more?

It’s easy to point to the spiralling cost of living to explain this phenomenon. But should we only put the blame on the tough economy? Can our own spending habits contribute to this earn-more-have-less problem? Continue reading Can Earning More Make You Poorer?