Having a Hard Time Saving Money? So is Everyone Else

Having a Hard Time Saving Money? So is Everyone Else

Are you having a hard time saving money? Well, saving money doesn’t come easily for anyone, whether it’s a retirement account or an emergency fund. But it turns out most people are struggling with it as much – or more – than you.

A recent survey from GoBankingRates found that making more money doesn’t mean you necessarily have more money stashed away. And that’s true even if you earn nearly $100,000. This is a big problem, since having some savings can protect your overall personal finances from unexpected (and unpleasant) surprises.

Here are some of the reasons employees at all income levels face issues putting money away, and how employers can help them correct their habits.

A universal problem putting money away

According to the survey, more than 70 percent of Americans making less than $25,000 a year have less than $1,000 in savings. The numbers are nearly identical for employees earning $50,000  – or even $75,000 – annually. Clearly, the problem isn’t just the amount of take home pay.

It can be confusing for employees in a lower income bracket to think those making double or triple their salary could still be living paycheck-to-paycheck. Many people likely think a decent raise in pay would solve all of their money problems, but it seems that for a majority of employees as their pay goes up, so does their spending.

Stress caused by a lack of savings

Without adequate savings, your employees are at the mercy of any unexpected expenses or changes to their budget. An injury, car problem or home repair could throw their finances out of whack and put them at risk of missing other bills and monthly payments or racking up debt to cover these costs.

Counting on the next paycheck to get by means there’s never a chance to build up a safety net and there are several factors creating this problem.

When an employee’s spending rises along with their salary, they experience  ‘lifestyle inflation’ and in some ways it’s understandable. A promotion or raise typically means a change in stature, so your employees might feel social pressure to upgrade their lifestyle along with their income. Or, employees could be facing a barrage of monthly expenses – including student debt along with rent and utilities – that eats up nearly as much of their now slightly bigger (after taxes are taken out) check.

No matter what the temporary financial stress, the underlying problem is often a lack of financial education. It doesn’t matter how much your workers earn; if they can’t manage their money well enough to get ahead of the ball, they’ll still feel financial stress.

Setting themselves up for lifelong financial stress

For some employees, this creates a daily problem of financial stress, but the bigger issue is that it’s setting them up for a lifetime of anxiety. Employees who can’t or don’t save will face difficult choices today for sure, but also even more complicated decisions as they near retirement – a second survey by GoBankingRates showed more than half of Americans have less than $10,000 saved for retirement. These workers may have to delay retirement, drastically alter their retirement plans or seek assistance from family, consequently hurting their relatives’ savings goals.

Financial stress forces your workers to think very short-term: making it until the next paycheck or covering the next set of monthly bills. But the less action they take to fix these problems now, the more they end up hurting their future selves.

For more information about Best Money Moves, email info@bestmoneymoves.com.

3 Simple Budget Saves That Will Lower Your Financial Stress

3 Simple Budget Saves That Will Lower Your Financial Stress

Financial stress is overwhelming – and more so when every little thing seems to pile on top of each other.

With so many financial issues for you to tackle, sometimes it seems like a miracle is the only possible way forward.

Not so. While financial stress can be overwhelming, small budget saves can help you re-float your boat, save and pay off debt. In short, small changes actually can make a huge difference over a relatively small period of time.

You’ve got to keep it simple. Much like paying off a smaller debt first to gain a sense of victory and motivation, your employees can revise their financial strategies in small ways to make things easier for themselves.

Here are three budget saves you can put into place today that will put you on the path to  financial success. They won’t alter everyone’s money situation overnight, but give them some time, and keep working at it, and the benefits will show up.

1. Switch to a cash budget. When someone can’t get their spending under control, they end up compounding their problems by piling up credit card debt and high-interest charges. Switching to a cash budget removes these risks by giving them a limited amount to spend that they know they can afford. Here’s how it works: Decide how much you’re going to spend each week, then take out that cash from the bank or ATM and commit to not spending any more until the next week. It’ll take time to get used to having cash in your wallet (we’ve all become so used to the cashless society) and you’ll need to adjust to new spending habits and plan around what you can and cannot afford. Even if you blow your budget for the first few weeks, just stick with it. You’ll soon see positive changes. One study by the Urban Institute showed that those who were reminded throughout the month to choose cash over credit were able to lower their credit card debt. And, that’s key.

2. Make savings – and payments – automatic. Staying on top of multiple monthly payments, from utilities and rent to credit cards and student loans, can be difficult and barely leaves room for you to think about savings. Switching to automatic payments and savings, however, gives you a chance to avoid late charges and increase your savings without thinking about it. Often, employers will allow employees to set up recurring deposits from their paycheck to a savings account each payday to build up emergency or retirement savings without any additional steps. They can pick an amount that’s affordable and realistic, even $20 per month, and over time they may be surprised by how that amount grows. Using automatic payments for recurring monthly expenses can do the same, streamlining payment processes and giving your employees more time to focus on lowering their stress in other ways.

3. Cut out or reduce one expense each month. If you’re in serious money trouble, nothing dashes your hopes for a solid financial future faster than believing that you’re powerless to change it. One way you can take back control is to identify and reduce – or cut out entirely – one expense each month. This could be your cable or cell phone package, commuting costs, money spent dining out or even a morning coffee. Encourage your family (if you have one) to find ways to lower their monthly bills, whether it’s avoiding a splurge or calling the relevant company to ask about other options. Not only will you lower your overall expenses it will help you reduce your financial stress because you’re in much more control of your cash.

Your Best Money Moves: If your employees are struggling with their finances, gaining some knowledge and feeling support from their workplace can make a big difference in their stress levels, if only by letting them know they’re not alone. You can start by sharing small changes like these and encouraging and celebrating the efforts of your workers. Even when the solution is simple, the work behind it can be difficult and your employees will appreciate your support when it comes to their financial stress.

Why There Isn’t Enough Money To Pay Bills and Save?

Why There Isn’t Enough Money To Pay Bills and Save?

Ever wonder why there often isn’t enough money at the end of the month to get all of your bills paid and save money?

You’re not alone. According to a new survey published this week by the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards (CFP Board), nearly half (48 percent) of all Americans “don’t always have enough money left over to save after paying their bills.”

“Our economy has come a long way since the depths of the recession, but most Americans up and down the socioeconomic scale are still facing significant pressures in saving for today and tomorrow,” said CFP Board Consumer Advocate Eleanor Blayney, CFP®, in a press release. “An inability to start saving early, debt and stagnant incomes are just a few of the factors driving Americans’ financial anxiety.”

The survey found:

  • More than a third (35 percent) of Americans surveyed have seen a significant decrease in household income;
  • A little over a third (34 percent) say that the amount of debt they have prevents them from saving;
  • Only half (51 percent) save money regularly on a monthly basis;
  • Roughly 1-in-3 Americans (30 percent) has experienced a job change in the past three years;
  • About 1-in-5 (20 percent) of those polled has experienced a major medical expenditure in the past three years;
  • Half of Americans (51 percent) believe credit card debt is the most important debt to pay off, followed by mortgages (36 percent) and student loan debt (19 percent);
  • More than one-third (36 percent) of Americans anticipate working in retirement.

(While the survey found that some Americans are feeling more positive about the economy as a whole, it’s typically those with a higher net worth who have the most positive economic views. Which isn’t that surprising.)

If you look at the list, it’s clear that a third of Americans have seen a significant decrease in household income, are trying to pay down a mountain of debt, and have experienced a job change in the past three years. Debt, including medical debts or expenses, can eat a huge hold in anyone’s budget.

What can you do? At Best Money Moves, we believe in getting your debt paid down as quickly a possible, and we have tools that help you do that (without trying to trick you into buying something or reselling your information to a credit card company). But here’s the big secret: Throw as much cash as you have at your debt that carries the highest interest rate. And, keep doing that as often as possible, while always being sure to make your minimum payment.

That’s it. There’s nothing more magical about debt repayment than that. Once you pay down a debt, use all the extra cash you’re “saving” each month to pay down the next debt, and so on. What you’ll see is that paying down debts is possible and can be done fairly quickly. You just have to make the commitment to put it first in your financial life.

I will add this: Every time you pay down a debt, you’re saving the interest you would have paid. That interest equals the net interest rate you’re paying. So if your credit card has an interest rate of 15.9 percent, every dollar you prepay will effectively “earn” 15.9 percent. And these days, it’s hard to get that much of a return anywhere, let alone in a savings account.

So, get your debts paid off and start saving for your goals and dreams, whatever they may be.

Ilyce Glink is the Founder/CEO of Best Money Moves, and a nationally-syndicated, award-winning personal finance columnist, best-selling author and radio talk show host. Contact her today to get a free trial and start lowering your employees’ financial stress levels.

 

 

Making Americans’ Financial Lives Great Again

Making Americans’ Financial Lives Great Again

In the wake of the Republican National Convention, it seems appropriate to lay out some steps ordinary Americans can take to make their financial lives great again – or, if yours has never been particularly strong, then at least make it better.

  1. Stop spending. In my books on personal finance, I’ve often recommended a Go To Zero strategy for managing your money. Here’s how it works: Imagine all of your expenses on a table. Now, take your arm and wipe them all off. You’ve now got a clean slate, and you can put expenses back on the table in the order of importance: Shelter, utilities, food, transportation, etc. When you run out of cash in your budget, you simply stop spending.
  2. Start saving. Another strategy is to stop spending well before you run out of take home pay and use that extra cash to start saving. Or, if you are carrying debt, simply use the extra cash each month to pay down your debt faster. Remember, every dollar of debt you prepay effectively earns you that interest rate. So, if you prepay $1 of debt at an interest rate of 14%, you’ve effectively earned 14% interest on that dollar.
  3. Make paying off non-deductible debt your top priority. If you’re paying to service your debt, you’re not going to get rich. You’re not going to have a great financial life. And, you’re not going to get rid of the anxiety that comes along with having crushing debt. So, start prepaying your non-deductible debt as fast as possible. In addition to feeling more in control of your financial life, you might just notice that you’re sleeping betterl.
  4. Practice “deferred gratification.” One thing about today’s world, everything happens instantaneously, almost miraculously. But when it comes to money, nothing good happens instantly. That why practicing deferred gratification can have such a positive effect. By simply pushing off a purchase (even one you think you must have), you’ll quickly see you can live without it. And if not, then at least you know you’re making a truly “can’t live without” purchase decision.

I’ve noticed that if I just say “no, for now” I generally don’t miss whatever it is I’ve done without. And, 9 times out of 10, I never get around to purchasing the item. Even if it’s on sale. I just figure out a workaround or do without. If you make all of your purchases thoughtfully, instead of gratuitously, that’s how you’ll make your financial life great again.

And, as Americans, living the financially great life should be an inalienable right.

Ilyce Glink is the Founder and CEO of Best Money Moves. She is also the author of 13 books on personal finance and real estate and the CEO of Think Glink Media, a digital content agency.

A Big Money Lesson For Only 60p (Less Than $1)

A Big Money Lesson For Only 60p (Less Than $1)

More than 30 years ago, as I was packing for my junior year abroad, my mother handed me a check for around $2,500 and said, “This money has to last all year. You’d better start keeping track of what you’re spending.”

And with that, I went off to Wales to study music and literature. When I got there, I deposited the check in my local Barclay’s branch on High Street. The dollar was strong then (close to where it is now), so while my dollars went pretty far, my funds weren’t unlimited by any stretch of the imagination. I had to watch every pound or penny I spent.

For 60p, I bought a small black notebook and stuck it in my pocket. Of course, this was 1984, before the Internet, before cell phones, and certainly before Venmo, PayPal and apps that helped you “save your change.”

What I got was my first big money lesson, and all for only 60p, or less than $1.

I had to do it all by hand. Dutifully, I recorded the beer and “still orange” (a non-alcoholic orangeade of sorts) I drank at the local pub. I’d record the pounds I spent buying bottles of full-fat milk (delivered fresh every morning to the local shop from the local farm – before any of us understood the meaning of the word “organic”) and hot butter muffins from the local bakery. At night, we’d go out after the pub closed to the local Chinese take-out and ordered a very greasy egg roll stuffed with bean sprouts, what I’d refer today as an Anthony Bourdain late-night special.

No expense was too little to escape the tracking, and my little black book soon became worn around the edges as I recorded train tickets to London and Inverness, Scotland, the cost of a boat ride across the Irish Sea, entry tickets to museums and dances, dinners out with friends, and a flight to the continent.

I managed pretty well, though when running a bit short of funds in the late spring, I took a job at a local Welsh pub pouring drinks and making fish and chips. I was paid a little and got some tips (but if I’m being honest, I’d have paid them to let me do it – that’s how much fun it was). Still, it was enough to augment my dwindling savings and allow me to plan for additional travel during the summer months, when I found myself calculating whether it would be cheaper to buy a EuroRail pass (which provided unlimited rail travel for a month) or individual tickets. After a bunch of calculations (by hand) and a lot of phone calls at the corner phone booth, individual tickets won out.

When I look back, I think that this little black book set me off on a different course in life. I learned that I could stretch even a tiny amount of money a long way (a “dime into a dollar”). I learned that I could be self-sufficient and that I was just fine with what today I’d call “deferred gratification.”

My first big money lesson. I still have that little black book somewhere. Once in awhile, I pull it out to look at where I spent my money – every penny of it – during that year abroad. It reminds me that anything is possible, if you put your mind to it.

Ilyce Glink is the Founder and CEO of Best Money Moves. She is also the author of 13 books on personal finance and real estate and the CEO of Think Glink Media, a digital content agency.