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Money Management: Part 2. Homework (Passport page 22). How’s It Going?. Budgeting Process. Building the Budget. Refining YOUR Budget. Determining what w orks for you Comparing a ctual to budget spending Considering guideline b udgets Deciding what to adjust
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Homework (Passport page 22)
Refining YOUR Budget • Determining what works for you • Comparing actual to budget spending • Considering guideline budgets • Deciding what to adjust • Finding creative ways to save on everyday items • Understanding net worth • Tackling debt
Evaluating the Budget • Same Income and Expenses • More Income than Expenses • May have overestimated income • May indicate there are some expenses not captured in your budget • More Expenses than Income • May have underestimated income • May need to adjust the spending plan to reduce expenses or increase income
Zero Dollar Budget • Have every dollar spent on paper before the month begins • Plan expenses for the coming month • Rollover unspent money to the following months • Pay yourself first • Make a plan for extra money
The Right System For You • Envelope Method • Calendar Method • Register Method • Receipts Method • Budget Spreadsheet • Personal Finance Software
Financial Pitfalls • Overcoming Temptations • Revisit Temptations List on Passport p. 15 • Track Spending to monitor progress • Work together with family members • Be realistic • Allow yourself some limited guilty pleasure
Financial Pitfalls Cont’d • If you use a credit card to cover $1,000 of periodic expenses and repay the minimum payment at 24% interest: • Monthly payment: $40 • Number of months in debt: 83 months (6 years and 11 months) • Total payments: $1,775 • Interest paid: $775 • If you charged $1,000 per year in periodic expenses over 3 years and repaid only the minimum, you would need 10 years and 6 months to repay the balance and would repay more than $1,575 in interest.
Variable Income • Salary + Commission • Needs = Salary • Wants = Commission • Irregular Pay • Budget using lowest paycheck allocating to needs • Excess goes to wants • Overtime • Accelerate savings, goals or debt reduction • Prioritizing Wants and Needs Essential • Savings absolute MUST
Adjusting Income Short-Term • Extra Work • Overtime • Part-time supplemental • Review W-4 • Sell Assets • Yard sales/Online sales • Develop Hobbies • Turn a craft or hobby into income Long-Term • Develop career path
Savings Periodic • set aside monthly amounts to fund periodic expenses Emergency • truly dire occurrences like job loss or a serious accident Retirement • IRAs, 401(k), etc. Goal Savings • S.M.A.R.T. Goals
Ways to Save • Food: • Limit eating out to special occasions • Make a grocery list • Use coupons • Join membership clubs/discount stores • Buy generic • Buy in bulk if you use large quantities • Bag lunch • Drink water when eating out • Your Ideas?
Ways to Save – Cont’d • Clothing • Transportation • Shelter • Utilities • Entertainment
Net Worth Assets Cash Accounts Investments House Car Personal Property Liabilities Debts Credit Cards Auto Loan Mortgage Assets (OWN) – Liabilities (OWE) = Net Worth
Financial Statements Spending Plan Net Worth Short Term Long Term
Dealing with Debt • Debt impacts current spending • Debt delays savings goals • Make a plan to reduce debt • Evaluate debt • Prioritize debt • Create repayment plan • Celebrate success
Snowball Method • Pay off one debt by paying more than minimum • Apply payment from debt #1 to next debt as additional payment. • As debts pay off, continue to apply payments to next debt. • www.powerpay.org to create your snowball
Key Elements • Keep it realistic • Include spending allowances • Use guidelines • Refer to your budget before spending money
What Have You Learned? (Post-Test page 24)
Homework (Passport page 32)