Rationale of Budgeting
Here are twelve good reasons to get you started:
1. Family budgets are used as a baseline, analysis-tool and
roadmap. It is a useful tool and guide. It tells you whether
you are headed in the direction you want to be headed in
financially. It helps you to move from spending to saving and
good fiscal balance, management and responsibility.
You may have goals and dreams, but if you do not set up
guidelines for reaching them and you do not measure your
progress, you may end up going so far in the wrong direction
you can never make it back. Can you imagine the government or a
major corporation operating without a budget? No, and neither
should you.
2. It is often described and justified as an empowering
enabler. A budget lets you control your money instead of your
money controlling you.
3. A budget is a realistic estimate and true reflection of
current circumstance and means, a type of financial
situation-analysis that will tell you if you are living within
your means. Before the widespread use of credit cards, you
could tell if you were living within your means because you had
money left over after paying all your bills.
There are lots of family budgeting tools available on line
that make it a fun and enjoyable task and activity, to assess
and analyze your family's financial situation with minimum
effort. (www.MoneyPants.com)
There is also lots of free financial software and most of it
sets up easily and provides you with a detailed family budget
online. It manages your finances, hassle-free and almost
effortless.
Well, almost! It will require input and minimum effort
through hands-on involvement in setting it up, populating,
maintaining and editing it. Mvelopes.com is a good example of
market offerings that are available at no cost to you, just
waiting for the motivated family budgeter to embrace and try it
out!
Some websites offer free financial newsletters by e-mail,
with lots of money saving tips, budget advice, and other
relevant personal and family-related financial information
(www.planabudget.com).
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"Here are twelve good
reasons to get you started: 1. Family budgets
are used as a baseline, analysis-tool and
roadmap. It is a useful tool and guide. It
tells you whether you are headed in
the..."
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The availability, accessibility, virtual marketplace, ease
of use and more of credit cards has made the need for family
budgets much less obvious. Many people do not even realize they
are living far beyond their means until they are knee deep in
debt, struggling to make ends meet and sinking fast into murky
financial waters.
Budgeting is and can be a life and money saver, a reality
check, BUT ALSO a remedy!
4. A budget can help you meet your savings goals. It
includes a mechanism for setting aside money for savings and
investments.
5. Following a realistic budget frees up spare cash so you
can use your money on the things that really matter to you
instead of frittering it away on things you do not even
remember buying.
6. A budget helps your entire family focus on common goals.
It is unifying families in mutual purpose and effort, working
together towards a successful outcome and reward.
7. A budget helps you prepare for emergencies or large or
unanticipated expenses that might otherwise knock you for a
loop financially.
8. A budget can improve your marriage. A good budget is not
just a spending plan; it is a communication tool. Done right, a
budget can bring the two of you closer together as you identify
and work towards common goals and reduce arguments about
money.
9. A budget reveals areas where you are spending too much
money, so you can refocus on your most important goals.
10. A budget can keep you out of debt or help you get out of
debt.
11. A budget actually creates extra money for you to do use
on things that matter to you.
12. A budget helps you sleep better at night because you do
not lie awake worrying about how you are going to make ends
meet.
Nevertheless, despite all these wonderful reasons quoted
above, people are still hesitant to commit to family budgeting
as standard practice in their households. We might again want
to probe a little deeper still and ask why?
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