"Modern man drives a mortgaged car over a bond-financed highway on
credit-card petrol."
Taking control of your cash inflow and outflow is the base for financial
planning. Budgeting is important to gain control over your financial life,
be prepared and avoid surprises, save for a major purchase, get out of debt
and stay out of debt, expand your lifestyle, and to retire early.
Thiruvalluvar, a much celebrated Tamil poet emphasizes budgeting through his
following lines:
Incomings may be scant; but yet, no failure there,
If in expenditure you rightly learn to spare. (Kural: 478)
If in expenditure you rightly learn to spare. (Kural: 478)
Who prosperous lives and of enjoyment knows no bound,
His seeming wealth, departing, nowhere shall be found. (Kural: 479)
His seeming wealth, departing, nowhere shall be found. (Kural: 479)
Most of us hesitate to make a budget because we think it is about cutting
all the fun in life. Budgeting is not about cutting all the fun; it is about
conscious allocation of funds. Once we start spending consciously, our mind
will find out a whole new way of having fun within the budget.
Making Budget: A step by step guide
There is a saying, “God is in the details”. Detail every bit of your
financials while creating a budget.
1)
Check your financial
statements:
It could be your
utility bills, d’mat account statement, other investment receipts, ITR, Form
16A, Form 16, bank statement, credit card statement etc. The idea is to make
out the monthly average of income and expenses. Therefore the more details
you can get the more relevant and accurate will the budget be.
2)
Listing out income from
all sources:
It is very easy for
us to list down the income from employment or self employment. Normally we
will lose track of income from investments, rental income and other
miscellaneous income. Also check is there any annual income. Don’t forget to
record the incomes received by way of cash equivalents like meal voucher and
credit card reward points.
3)
Finding out your total
expenses:
We can easily list
down the major expenses. But listing out the miscellaneous and petty
expenses would be difficult. This is where the collected financial
statements would help. Don’t forget the annual expenses like car insurance
and property tax. Once you have recorded all the expenses then split them
into fixed expenses and variable expenses. This classification will provide
much more clarity.
Most people are surprised to learn that it may go for things that we do not
need at all. Writing your expenditures down provides us with the unique
opportunity to visualize and find out if any money goes for things that we
do not need or want.
4)
Are you saving or over
spending?
Now you have your
total income as well as total expenses. Deduct the total expenses from the
total income. You will know whether you are saving some money or doing over
spending. If you are saving some money channelize that money into the
priority areas such as clearing your credit card outstanding or any other
loan to become debt free or retirement savings or children’s future plan. If
you are on over spending, then you need to make some adjustments to
expenses.
5)
Review your spending
pattern:
On your expenses
list, pay close attention to the variable expenses. This is where you can
cut short a few expenses.
Every month we need
to keep aside appropriate amount for the proportionate annual expenses.
You can find out
the reasons for over spending. Most of the cases it would be emotional
buying or unplanned shopping. Once you have pointed out the reasons for
overspending, then find out the steps or precautions to be taken to rectify
the same.
6)
Are you on the track?
Check monthly:
Every month set
aside an hour to compare the actual expenses with the budgeted expenses. If
there is a negative deviation, find out the measures to control them.
Why your earlier budgeting attempts failed?
Budgeting is not a onetime activity. It is a continuous process. Normally we
start budgeting with a genuine motive. But after a few months it may get
off-tracked like our attempts on dieting or exercising. Therefore one needs
to understand the behavioural aspects of budgeting.
1)
Positive Approach:
Never focus on the
negative aspects. Focus on the benefits of successful budgeting. What will
you accomplish by creating a budget? It could be becoming debt free, some
money for vacation, planning for retirement or children’s future.
2)
Keep your enthusiasm
alive:
Budgeting may over
a period of time become routine and hence boring. Set a few short term goals
like trying to repay the personal loan in 18 months instead of 36 months. If
you achieve it reward yourself. Recognition could be a good motivating
factor. Inform all your family members, friends and well wishers about your
progress on budgeting. You can also join in some of the forums related to
money management.
3)
Have a realistic
expectation:
One needs to keep
realistic expectation on the outcome of the budget. Over expectation may
demotivate you. Budgeting is not a magic. It is an art like singing and
dancing. You will be able to progress it only over a period of time with
constant practice.
If you have not done budgeting for yourself and family so far, then now is
the right time to take action. The fact that you are reading this article
shows you have decided to stop procrastinating, and have answered the
ancient question, “If not now, when?” with “NOW!”.
The
author is
Ramalingam K,
an MBA
(Finance) and Certified Financial Planner.
He is the Founder and Director of
Holistic Investment Planners (www.holisticinvestment.in)
a firm that offers Financial Planning and Wealth Management. He can be
reached at
ramalingam@holisticinvestment.in.
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