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Some good advice that’s boring

Some good advice that’s boring

The problem with saving is that spending is so bloody easy. Make it harder to spend and watch your savings skyrocket.

‘Save first, spend what’s left.’ This is great advice. It’s also the opposite to what most people do, which is ‘spend first, save what’s left.’

The second strategy has an obvious problem: what happens if there is nothing left after spending?

The answer, of course, is that nothing gets saved. And if nothing gets saved, nothing of any value gets bought. No home, no decent holiday, no seed money for your own business (the best way to become wealthy, by the way).

Which is why financially successful people save first, and spend what’s left. The good news is that modern technology gives us all a very easy way to do just that. We call this strategy ‘set and forget.’ It is nothing more sophisticated – and nothing more difficult – than setting up a system of direct debits. And then forgetting about them.

Direct debit is a really convenient way of ensuring you pay all your essential bills. When you organise for bills to be paid by direct debit, all you have to do is make sure you have enough money in your account on the day the payment is due. If this is a challenge, then try to organise the direct debits for the day after pay day. This gives you much less time to go spending before the bills are due.

(There is one word of warning when it comes to direct debit: make sure you actually check the bills that you are paying each month. You want to make sure prices have not risen without you realising, and that you are only being charged what you actually wanted. Hello, mobile phone company…)

The ‘trick’ then becomes to treat your savings plan like a normal bill that has to be paid regularly. A direct debit that has to be made each payday. Rent? Tick. Phone? Tick. Savings? Tick.

Let’s say you arrange for an extra $200 to be transferred each fortnight into a savings account that is hard to access (or, at least, that is hard to access at 1am on Sunday morning). By the end of the year, you would have saved $5,200 plus any interest that you might be able to pick up.

All you have to do is keep getting paid and the saving occurs automatically. You set, and then forget.

The next step is also a simple one: make your savings hard to spend. This basically means making them hard to get to. A simple way to do this is to create a dedicated savings account with another bank. If you bank with the NAB, get a savings account with Westpac. If you bank with Westpac, get a savings account with the ANZ. Make this your one and only account with that bank. Go for the highest interest-earning account you can get (this will depend on how much you already have saved).

Then – and this is really important – get rid of any plastic card that comes attached to the new account. Make the money in that account hard to spend. Make it so that you have to transfer the money somewhere else before you can spend it. This will means transferring money from one bank to another, which usually takes at least 24 hours. Bye bye impulse spending.

Some people take the idea a step further and don’t even set up internet and phone banking for the new savings account. The only way to get money out of this kind of account is to physically go into a branch during business hours. And branches are not open on weekends. Certainly not at 1am every Sunday morning.

This is just one way to go about forcing yourself to save. There are various others. But they all have one thing in common: you have to automate the saving – and then make it hard to access those savings.

That is the simplest way to save first, and only spend what’s left. Save without thinking.

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Peter Dugan is an authorised representative (380321) of Avana Financial Solutions Pty Ltd (AFSL 516325).


Our professional liability is limited by Section 3 of the Institute of Public Accountants scheme approved under the Professional Standards Act 1994 (NSW) 


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All strategies and information provided on this website are general advice only which does not take into consideration any of your personal circumstances. Please arrange an appointment to seek personal financial, legal, credit and/or taxation advice prior to acting on this information.