Causes of Budget Failure
Many people make an honest attempt to budget, but become
discouraged and give up before they are able to accomplish any
significant financial gain. The top three causes of budget
failure come into play before you even begin to set up your
budget. Awareness of these budget busters, is your first line
of defense in the Battle of the Budget.
Budget Buster #1 - Negative Attitude
It cannot be emphasized enough--a positive attitude about
budgeting is essential to your success. If you think of
budgeting in negative terms (such as a financial diet,
financial handcuffs, restrictive, penny-pinching, a sacrifice,
etc.), you are sure to fail, unless you are a martyr or a
masochist who finds some strange reward in a punishing
experience. For purposes of this article, we will assume that
you are neither.
A positive attitude means you think of a budget as a means
to an end--a way to achieve your dreams and goals--and that
postponing the instant gratification of spending all the money
you earn is worth the rewards you will earn in the end.
Budget Buster #2 - Lack of Motivation
What is your motivation for budgeting? Are you trying to
appease a nagging spouse? Following the terms of a debt
repayment plan with a consumer credit counseling agency?
Complying with an agreement made in bankruptcy court? These are
not bad motivations, but they are external pressures and will
probably not be easy to maintain over time. The best
motivations are internally generated: do you honestly believe
that budgeting can help you meet your goals?
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"Many people make an
honest attempt to budget, but become
discouraged and give up before they are able to
accomplish any significant financial gain. The
top three causes of budget failure come
into..."
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If you need a little help in the motivation department, see
"Twelve Reasons Budgeting Can Improve Your Life". A quick
re-read of these will surely inspire and ignite a motivational
spark or two!
Budget Buster # 3 - Unrealistic
Expectations
What do you expect to gain from instituting and following a
budget? Do you think that setting up a budget will reveal large
caches of hidden cash or that the budget fairy will sprinkle
fairy dust over your budget and magically transform your
spending habits after a month or two of tracking expenses?
The reality is that budgeting is an endurance event--those
who stick with it, through thick and thin, will come out ahead
financially. Do not expect miracles. What you WILL see if you
stick with it is steady, measurable progress towards the goals
that really matter to you.
Starting a budget without having a positive attitude,
internal motivation, and realistic expectations, will probably
set you up for failure. You can greatly increase your chances
of success by ruling out the three biggest budget busters
before you even begin.
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