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Money Management: Part 1. Homework. How’s It Going?. Money Management. Tracking our Spending Setting Goals Creating a Budget. What Do You Know?. Let’s Talk About. You. Did You Know?. 56% of U.S. households don't have a budget.
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Money Management • Tracking our Spending • Setting Goals • Creating a Budget
Let’s Talk About You
Did You Know? • 56% of U.S. households don't have a budget. • Over 11 million adults don’t monitor their overall spending and don’t know how much they spend on food, housing, and entertainment. • 28%, or nearly 64 million adults, admit to not paying all of their bills on time. Source: April 2010Consumer Financial Literacy Survey by Harris Interactive, Inc
Steps to Creating a Budget • Track spending habits • Set priorities for Goals • Include Periodic Needs • Write it down • Adjust
Types of Expenses • Fixed • Variable • Periodic • Discretionary • Non-discretionary
Setting Goals • Short-Term Goals: less than one year • Long Term Goals: more than one year • S.M.A.R.T. Goals
S.M.A.R.T. Goals • Specific: State exactly what is to be done • Measurable: Include how the goal can be measured • Actionable: Determine steps to reach the goal • Realistic: Do not set goals for something unrealistic • Time Bound: State when the goal will be met
S.M.A.R.T. Financial Goals • Goal: I want to buy a new car • S.M.A.R.T. goal: • Specific: I want to save money for a down payment on a new car • Measurable: I need to save $2,000 for the down payment • Actionable: I will save $50 from every paycheck ($100 a month) • Realistic: I usually spend $200 a month on dining out and coffee drinks, so I’ll cut that spending in half and put the rest towards my down payment • Time Bound: I want to have the $2,000 saved in two years
S.M.A.R.T. Financial Goals Budgeting • Identify the cost and the timeframe for the goal: • Example: I want to save $3000 over the next two years for a down payment on a new car. • Break the cost into annual costs • $3000 for 2 years = $1,500 per year • Divide annual cost by 12 to get monthly amount needed: • $1500/12 = $125 monthly
Tracking Your Spending • Write down where your money goes ~ every dime, every dollar. • Consider the automatic spending that you may have in place (payroll withholdings, EFT payments, child support, etc). • Track it for a minimum of two weeks. • Where are your temptations? What needs to be controlled? • Is it a want or a need?
Write It Down Income • Payroll • Child support Expenses • Fixed • Variable • Periodic
Creating YOUR Budget • Your spending trackers. • Remember, you’ll need at least two weeks worth of data, but more is even better. • Use historical data from paystubs, bank and credit card statements. • Your S.M.A.R.T. goals and other priorities (paying off debt, vacation, etc). • Be sure to bring how much money you’ll need for these. • Your income and expenses ~ fixed, variable and periodic
Net Worth Assets Cash Accounts Investments House Car Personal Property Liabilities Debts Credit Cards Auto Loan Mortgage Assets – Liabilities = Net Worth
Financial Statements Spending Plan Net Worth Short Term Long Term