Budgeting Without Shame


by Martin Lukac - Date: 2007-01-05 - Word Count: 540 Share This!

Budgeting isn't that big a deal. Too many people look at budgeting as this large sign saying "I have money trouble."

But it is far from that. Budgeting is responsible financial management. Every successful business budgets. Even the government budgets. It is necessary if you want to meet your financial goals. You may be thinking that no one you know budgets right now, but eventually they will need to. After all, you don't want to be working well into your retirement years just because all of your friends are.

Budgeting keeps you ahead of your bills. It helps you pay off your debt and save for the things that really matter to you. Stop thinking of it as a way to limit your spending or hold you back. It isn't a financial diet. It is a financial road map.

Think of it as three main parts: summarizing how you spend, controlling what you spend and planning for your future.

When you first start budgeting, the first step is to track your spending for a short amount of time to see where it is going. Set up income and expense categories to fit your spending. Using someone else's categories or budget template almost never works. We all have different expenses. It helps to keep all of your receipts for two months. Use these to create your categories and see where you are spending your money.

Make your categories detailed enough to tell you where things are going, but don't go too far and get too detailed. This will just slow you down and make you want to give up.

Once you know what you are spending and where, you can establish some spending goals for yourself. There are some places you can skim back and there are some that you can't. You have to be realistic. Don't set a goal of cutting back your grocery bill by $200 in the first month. Take smaller steps and set smaller challenges. Look for ways to reduce your spending and make it a challenge.

As you work on cutting your costs and reducing your spending, you can start working towards the financial future part of your budget. I like to include with my budget all the planning I do financially. Your debt reduction, your yearly expenses savings, your insurance needs -- this is all tied to your budget. Plan out what you need to do to get out of debt. Without your budget, you wouldn't be able to find the money to pay off your debt faster. Include in your budget categories for debt reduction, emergency savings and yearly payments. You will probably find that you have to choose one goal at a time to work towards. Pay off your debt first, then start your savings.

And keep in mind that a budget isn't something you write down and then try to stick with no matter what. Budgets move. They are adjustable. Just as your finances change, so will your budget. You may find that you have less income one month and need to readjust how much you can spend on groceries and entertainment for the month. Or you could have an unexpected bill come in. Don't just toss away your budget when this happens, use it to take care of the situation.


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Martin Lukac http://www.MartinLukac.com , represents http://www.RateEmpire.com , an Internet consumer banking marketplace. RateEmpire.com is a destination site of personal finance, investing, taxes and mortgage rates. RateEmpire.com provides mortgage guides and financial rates and information. RateEmpire.com also operates a financial portal #1 American Financial, found at http://www.1AmericanFinancial.com

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