AMERICUS —
The New Year is an opportunity for do-overs, fresh starts, and new beginnings. Quitting a bad habit, losing weight, getting more exercise, and doing better with money are common New Year's resolutions. The goal is to do better in the coming year.
These popular resolutions have more in common than turning up at the top of the list of resolutions people make every year. They involve day to day habits and routines that develop gradually over many years. Changing overnight is a tall order, and rarely possible. By Ground Hog's Day, most resolutions have fallen by the wayside.
Why? Because people tend to be too hard on themselves. You fall off the wagon one time, decide you have failed, and give up. But people who stick with it long enough to be successful know that failing is part of the process. Persistence--trying again after every failure--is the key to success.
If you want to fail at keeping resolutions, focus on what you have to give up. Thinking about what you are sacrificing all the time practically guarantees an epic failure. Banish this negativity from your thoughts. Think positive! To be successful you need to focus on the prize.
Michael Rupured, Extension Family Financial Management Specialist, recommends the following tips to help you manage your money better in the coming year.
Know where your money goes. Find out how much money comes in and exactly what you do with it. Carry a pad with you for a month or two. Record every purchase. At the end of the month, separate your spending into no more than a dozen categories such as food, housing, and transportation.
Target eyebrow-raising surprises for spending cuts. If you have never tracked your spending, you will probably find out you spend a lot more than you thought for something you do every day. If it bothers you that you spend so much for whatever it may be, do something about it.
Set realistic and specific goals. A specific goal includes the cost of the goal and the date you plan to reach it, such as planning to save $600 by next December for holiday gifts. The goal is realistic if you can afford to set aside $50 each month. If you cannot, adjust the goal or increase your income.
Develop a plan for spending to meet goals. Besides goals, your spending plan needs to include fixed, variable, and occasional expenses. Fixed expenses are the same every month. Variable expenses go up or down each month. Occasional expenses are due less often than every month. Some occasional expenses, like birthdays and annual insurance premiums, you know about. Others, like medical bills, arise unexpectedly.
Pay yourself first. Saving whatever is left usually means not saving at all. Instead, put the money you need to save for goals and occasional expenses in your savings account before you spend a penny for anything else. Better yet, arrange for an automatic deposit or payroll deduction into your savings account. When you get a raise at work, sign up for half the raise amount to go into a savings account or a company savings plan.
Eliminate debt. Pay attention to how much you pay in monthly finance charges on credit card and other debt. Instead of paying interest each month on your debt, you could be earning it on your savings. Being on the lending side of that transaction is a much better deal than being on the borrowing side. The money going to debt payments each month could be going to your savings.
Focus on one expense at a time. When making changes, it is easy to go too far, too fast. Commit to making a few changes at a time to reduce your spending for a particular expense. Stick with the changes until they become second nature. If you miss a day, a few days, or even a week do not give up.
These simple suggestions can help you do better with the money you have. Some changes pay off more rapidly than others. The sooner you start, the more you stand to gain.
Mitzi Bacon is Sumter County Extension agent, Family and Consumer Sciences, University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service. Contact her at 924-4476.
Local Columnists
December 27, 2012
2013 money resolutions
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