|
Choose
Your Budget
Excerpted from the bestselling
book, It's More Than Money — It’s
Your Life by Candace
Bahr, CEA, CDFA and Ginita
Wall, CPA, CFP®, CDFA.
When it comes to budgeting, one
size does not fit all. A detailed
budget will help you control every
expense. But if you tend to overspend
in just one or two categories, you
may not need an elaborate budget.
Here are five different types of
budgets, one of which is right for
you:
A Comprehensive Budget. If
money is tight and you want to cut
back on your spending, you will need
a detailed budget that keeps track
of everything you spend, and you’ll
want to monitor your spending against
these budget categories frequently.
A Problem-Solving Budget. If
you have trouble controlling money
in just a few categories, such
as clothing or entertainment, create
a finely detailed budget for just
these categories. For example,
keeping track of clothing expenses
for each member of the family by
clothing type may help you pinpoint
trouble areas.
A Planning
Budget. If
you want to save for particular
goals, add budget categories to
your spending plan that create
pockets of savings to meet your
objectives. Monitor your progress
and adjust your savings as needed.
An
Overall Budget. Perhaps
you merely need a system for monitoring
your overall spending from year
to year. A budget with broad
categories will help you monitor
your spending habits so that
your expenses stay under control
as your income rises.
A
Cost-Saving Budget. If
saving more money year after year
is your goal, analyze your
past expenses, then create
a budget that reduces your
expenditures in each category
gradually. For example, if
your family vacations usually
cost $5,000 per year, cut that
figure to $4,000 for the coming year
and $3,000 the year after that.
At WIFE we welcome your comments. Please feel free to contact us.
|