How to Manage Your Money: Six Principles of Personal Finance

https://youtube.com/watch?v=vl2sasYSY4E

Clipping coupons and scoring flights with
credit card miles can save a few bucks here and there, but achieving long-term financial
stability requires a much more holistic approach. Let's look at six big personal finance topics
budgeting, saving, debt, taxes, insurance, and retirement and discuss a helpful principle
for each. Number one: When budgeting, consider focusing
on the big-ticket items. You may have heard you'd be a millionaire
if you'd just skip your morning latte, but it's likely that you can save more by cutting
costs on the expensive stuff like housing and transportation. According to Kelley Blue Book, in 2019, the
average new car cost about $37,000. But buying the same car pre-owned could save
more than $10,000 much more than a year's worth of lattes. Number two: When setting savings goals, be
specific about your plan to get there. It's easy to say, I'm going to save $6,000
for retirement this year, but you also need to define your tactics for pursuing your goal.

Subgoals can help guide your savings strategy:
if you want to save $6,000 this year, think about how you might save $500 this month by
increasing your income or trimming your expenses by about $115 a week. These mile markers can help you assess how
realistic your goal is and help you monitor your progress. Number three: Avoid high-interest debt and
loans for items that could quickly lose value. You might have heard to avoid debt at all
costs, but not all debt is created equal. One type of debt to avoid is debt with an
interest rate higher than 5%, like credit card debt carried from month to month. Also, try to avoid going into debt for anything
that is likely to quickly loses value, like boats, RVs, jewelry, and other luxury goods. But there are times borrowing money makes
sense. For example, loans for education or starting
a business are often considered healthy debt because they may lead to more income down
the road. For some, a low-interest mortgage might be
a good use of debt, because a house has the potential to appreciate.

And even using a credit card as long as you
pay the balance in full every month can help improve your credit score by showing lenders
you can responsibly manage debt. But healthy debt only helps your credit score
if you make your payments on time, so if you're looking to increase your credit score, only
borrow money you're confident you'll be able to pay back.

Number four: Reduce your taxable income. This doesn't mean make less money this
means find ways to pay less taxes on the money you make. One way to do this is to receive income in
a tax-exempt form, meaning get compensated in a way that isn't taxable. For example, many employers offer benefits
that allow you to receive or set aside untaxed money for things like retirement, health care,
education, transportation, and child care.

A second way to potentially reduce your taxes
is to defer them meaning pay your taxes later by contributing to a traditional IRA or 401(k). With these types of retirement accounts, you
don't have to pay taxes until you withdraw your money during retirement, when your tax
rate may be lower. Number five: Avoid insurance for expenses
you can afford to pay for out of pocket. Depending on your personal situation, you
may need car insurance, home or renter's insurance, or life insurance. And everyone needs health insurance. Studies suggest that more than 60% of all
bankruptcies are related to medical issues, so strive to have at least minimum coverage. But remember that the purpose of insurance
is to protect you in unfortunate scenarios. In exchange for protection, you make regular
payments to an insurance company called premiums. Premiums are guaranteed and often ongoing
expenses. For smaller valuables, like electronic devices,
you may want to skip insurance if you can afford to replace them, because paying for
coverage you might never use can be a waste of money.

And finally, number six: Don't just save
for retirement invest for retirement. Realistically, just saving isn't likely
going to be enough to reach your retirement goals. Investing can help grow your money over time. As you can see, if you invested $1,000 in
stocks in 1975, by the end of 2018, your investment would've been worth over $130,000. How can $1,000 grow so fast? Over time, compound interest, which means
earning interest on interest, can help investors experience exponential growth, or growth that
occurs at an increasingly rapid rate. Contributing to retirement accounts like 401(k)s
and IRAs can potentially help you save on taxes and allow your investments to compound
even faster. So remember:
When budgeting, consider focusing on the big-ticket items. When setting savings goals, be specific about
your plan to help you get there. Avoid high-interest debt and loans for items
that will quickly lose value. Consider taking steps to help reduce your
taxable income. Avoid insurance for expenses you can pay for
out of pocket.

And finally, consider investing for retirement. While there's no shortage of personal finance
advice out there, cutting through the noise to focus on high-impact adjustments can potentially
have an enduring effect on your financial future..

As found on YouTube

Five Key Elements Of Debt Management | How To Get Out Of Debt And Gain Financial Freedom

(upbeat music) – Hi, Peter Boolkah here, and welcome to today's edition of the Transition Guy. Now, today, I want to talk
to you about paying off debt, and that is a topic that
seems to be coming up time and time again, and I have
a lot of people reaching out to me and saying, well,
I'm so badly in debt. I don't know what to do. So I put together a five stage
plan on how you can get rid of debt, and really, it
starts at number one. You see, debt is all about
your relationship with money. It is your mindset about
money, and the question you gotta ask yourself
from a mindset perspective, do you have a saver's
mindset or a spender mindset? And they're two really
different ways of thinking. Savers are people that
will think about, okay, I'm gonna put this away, that away.

They're very much cautious people. They're saving for tomorrow at
the expense of some of today, whereas spenders, they're
quite happy to say, well, I want to go on holiday. I don't have the money, yet I'll put it on the credit card and
think about it later. Yeah, saver mindset is
thinking about later at the expense of today, and
a spender mindset is thinking about today at the expense of the future, and you gotta work out which one are you? Because that will determine
how you handle things, and really, in order
for you to reduce debt, if you've got the spender
mindset, you need to shift that. You need to get some help
into creating a saver mindset, otherwise your old
habits may be the habits that have actually got you
in trouble in the first place and if you continue
having those same habits and that same relationship with money, you're gonna go through the vicious circle and always end up where you've been.

Number two, discipline. In order to get rid of debt, you have to be massively disciplined. Are you an impulsive person
or a measured person? The impulsive person is that
person that sees something and they want to have it,
they'll go and buy it. They won't think about whether
they can afford it or not, they go out there and they get it, whereas the measured person,
they're gonna be thinking, okay, I want it, how am I gonna get it? Or more importantly, can I afford it and how can I afford it? Now, I know that there's
gonna be some people out there that are in the poverty trap
and they're constantly trying to find money and they
can't seem to get out of it, but I'll give you some tactics
on that a little bit later. Number three, value set. Are you exchanging time for money? So a lot of people say,
yeah, but it's okay, I've got a job, so what
am I supposed to do? I get paid this much an
hour, I get this much a week, and that's what I have to live off.

No, it's not what you have to live off, it's what you choose to live off. Yes, you may have to
live off of that for now, but the question's gonna be do you have to live off that forever? No, but that requires change on your side. How do you go from
exchanging time for money to exchanging value for money? So one of the things was I
used to work for McDonald's, and I started off on
something really pitiful.

I think it was £1.30
an hour, and back then, they had different wage brackets
for different age groups. You could've done the same
job, but if you're under 18, you got massively paid less. Well, for two years, I could
either bitch and moan about, well, that's my end and
I'm gonna have to just work on the really bare minimum
wage or I could do something about it, and in McDonald's,
you had the opportunity of the more you learn, the more you earn. So the better you became,
the more useful you became, whether you learnt all
the different stations, then each time you sort
of become more trained, you got a pay raise. Okay, and at the time, it
may have only been five pence an hour, but by the time
you did all the modules, that ended up being quite
a lot of money per hour, and then when you said,
well, every time you sort of took the decision, I want
to step up, I want to sort of learn, and I want to sort of move up in the organization, take on
additional responsibilities, that also came with money.

So that is the whole
exchanging your value. It's saying, okay, do you know what? I'm gonna make myself more
valuable to the organization because if I do that, then
I can earn more money, and the interesting thing is, yes, McDonald's provided training, et cetera, and they did all of
that and that was great. I did a lot of the
education on my own time, and that was interesting. As a 16-year-old, I took
stuff home and learnt it because the quicker I
took this stuff on board, the quicker I would move up.

Number four, it's all about budgets. Are you actually budgeting your life? Now, I run very strict personal budgets. I know what's coming in,
I know what's going out. I know what my affordability is. Okay, as a 16, 17-year-old,
I didn't know that, and a lot of the bad habits,
I mean, I got into debt as a youngster because I
never had the disciplines or the mindset of paying off debt. I just accumulated debt. Probably one of the biggest
challenges I had was that I got a credit card quite
young, and that relationship with that credit card was interesting.

I seemed to be spending,
spending, spending, and then the debt would
rise, would rise, would rise, and before you know it, it
can be quite out of control and can be quite daunting,
to say the least. So you need to budget, you need
to understand your numbers. You need to be brutally honest, where do you stand with that right now? What are the brutal facts? And more importantly, then
what are you gonna do? If you got higher credit
card debts, then you pay off the credit card with the
highest interest rate first. You look at doing a balance transfer if you can get access to 0% credit cards. You do those little things
to start shifting it. You start looking at your utilities. Can I move my utilities over? One of my favorite, it wasn't at the time, but one of my favorite exercises is on your mortgage statement,
look at your annual mortgage statement and
look at how much interest you are paying per year
for where you live.

Then think about it and say,
well, over the entire life span of a mortgage, how much interest
are you gonna be paying? And then start thinking if
you had a saver mindset, and I don't mean saving money in the bank, but if you had the saver
mindset where you started to pay off a little bit
overpayments on your mortgage, how much interest do you think would save over a period of time? Do the exercise. It's frightening, and
finally, I know that a lot of you have got a job,
you're working hard, and you perhaps say, well,
I've got nothing else. I can't do anything else. I'm just at my max.

I want you start thinking, what does your side hustle look like? How can you earn money
for yourself on the side? And I don't mean going and getting a third or fourth job for somebody else. What do you need to learn
so that you can add value to yourself so that you can
start earning for yourself? We're in a beautiful age
where we can do side hustles.

You just need to work
out what your gift is, what your side hustle can be,
and how you can earn more. Now, we can go into far
more detail on this. We don't really have the
time in this episode, but if you want any
more information around how you can start paying off your debt, how you can start adding
more value to your skillset so you can earn more because
you're adding more value to organizations and you
work around your mindset, head over to boolkah.com and get in touch, and if you loved today's
episode, please like it, subscribe, and share it so
that others can benefit also, and finally, always remember that failing to learn is learning to
fail and please stay safe.

(calm music).