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I Think of Budgets About Like Diets. How
Can I Feel Better About One?
Budget need not be a dirty word.
If you have failed in your attempts to effectively budget in
your household in the past, you probably have yourself to
blame. Either you didn't have adequate information to set it
up properly or you didn't have the discipline to stick to your
spending and income plan.
A budget is the most fundamental and most effective financial
management tool available to all of us-yes, anyone, whether
you are earning thousands of dollars per year, or hundreds of
thousands of dollars. It is critically important to know how
much money you have to spend and where you are spending it.
A budget is the first and most important step towards
maximizing the power of your money. Many of us find ourselves
in the circumstance of making, spending and investing money
without a plan to guide us. Budgeting is planning. Planning is
crucial to produce the desired result.
A budget is a money plan. With it, you can organize and
control your financial resources, set and realize goals and
decide in advance how your money will work for you. A budget
can be simple as it is powerful. The main idea behind
budgeting is to save money up front for both known and unknown
expenses.
A budget is the key to enabling you to take charge of your
finances. You have the tools to decide what is going to happen
to your hard earned money and when. You can control your money
instead of having your money limit what you do.
A budget provides organization. Even in its simplest form, a
budget divides funds into categories and expenditures and
income. Make sure you treat savings as an expense. Budgets can
provide further organization by automatically providing
records of all your monetary transactions. They can also
provide the foundation for a filing system to organize bills,
receipts, and financial statements.
A budget should provide communication. If you are married,
have a family, or share money with anyone, having a
budget that you create together is a key to resolving personal
differences regarding handling money. The budget is a
communication tool to discuss the priorities for where your
money should be spent, as well as enabling cooperation to work
your system together.
A budget allows you to take advantage of opportunities.
Knowing the exact state of your personal monetary affairs, and
being in control, allows you to take advantage of
opportunities you might have otherwise missed. Have you
ever wondered if you could afford something? With a budget,
you will never have to wonder again-you will know.
A budget can provide you extra money. This can be very nice.
An effective budget will almost certainly produce extra money
for you to do with as you wish. Hidden fees and lost interest
can be eliminated. Unnecessary expenditures you will identify,
should be eliminated. Savings, NO MATTER HOW SMALL, can be
accumulated and made to work for you.
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