Chapter 65: Savings, Expenses, and Budgeting

Amy Baldwin

Questions to Consider: 

  • How is the flow of money best measured?
  • How do I keep things balanced?

“Excuse me while I save, invest, and build wealth.”

—Stephanie Lahart

What is the best way to get to the Mississippi River from here? Do you know? To answer the question, even with a map app, you would need to know where you are starting from and exactly where on the river you want to arrive before you can map the best route. Our financial lives need maps, too. You need to know where you are now and where you want to end up in order to map a course to meet the goal.

You map your financial path using a spending and savings plan, or budget, which tracks your income, savings, and spending. You check on your progress using a balance sheet that lists your assets, or what you own, and your liabilities, or what you owe. A balance sheet is like a snapshot, a moment in time, that we use to check our progress.

Budgets

The term budget is unpleasant to some people because it just looks like work. But who will care more about your money than you? We all want to know if we have enough money to pay our bills, travel, get an education, buy a car, etc. Technically, a budget is a specific financial plan for a specified time. Budgets have three elements: income, saving and investing, and expenses.

A figure illustrates ways to plan your budget.
Figure 65.1 A budget is a specific financial plan for a finite amount of time. For example, you can set a budget for a term or longer, but be sure to revisit it to make adjustments as needed.

Income

Income most often comes from our jobs in the form of a paper or electronic paycheck. During school, you may receive support from family that could be considered income. You may also receive scholarships, grants, or student loan money. When listing your income for your monthly budget, you should use your net pay, also called your disposable income. It is the only money you can use to pay bills. If you currently have a job, look at the pay stub or statement. You will find gross pay, then some money deducted for a variety of taxes, leaving a smaller amount—your net pay.

Sometimes you have the opportunity to have some other, optional deductions taken from your paycheck before you get your net pay. Examples of optional deductions include 401(k) or health insurance payments. You can change these amounts, but you should still use your net pay when considering your budget.

Some individuals receive disability income, social security income, investment income, alimony, child support, and other forms of payment on a regular basis. All of these go under income.

Saving and Investing

The first bill you should pay is to yourself. You owe yourself today and tomorrow. The quote at the start of this section was said by Warren Buffet who is one of the most successful investors of the 20th century, with a personal fortune of more than $60 billion. Setting aside a certain amount of money for savings and investments, before paying bills and making discretionary, or optional, purchases, will put you on a path to building your own reserve. Savings can be for an emergency fund or for short-term goals such as education, a wedding, travel, or a car. Investing, such as putting your money into stocks, bonds, or real estate, offers higher returns at a higher risk than money saved in a bank. Investments include retirement accounts that can be automatically funded with money deducted from your paycheck. Automatic payroll deductions are an effective way to save money before you can get your hands on it. Make saving money a priority to assure that you will work as hard to make the payment to yourself as you work to make your car or housing payment. The money you “pay” toward saving or investing will earn you back your money, plus some money earned on your money. Compare this to the cost of buying an item on credit and paying your money plus interest to a creditor. Paying yourself first is a habit that pays off!

Pay yourself first! Put something in savings from every paycheck or gift.

Expenses

Expenses are categorized in two ways. One method separates them into fixed expenses and variable expenses. Rent, insurance costs, and utilities (power, water) are fixed: they cost about the same every month and are predictable based on your arrangement with the provider. Variable expenses, on the other hand, change based on your priorities and available funds; they include groceries, restaurants, cell phone plans, gas, clothing, and so on. You have a good degree of control over your variable expenses. You can begin organizing your expenses by categorizing each one as either fixed or variable.

A second way to categorize expenses is to identify them as either needs or wants. Your needs come first: food, basic clothing, safe housing, medical care, and water. Your wants come afterward, if you can afford them while sticking to a savings plan. Wants may include meals at a restaurant, designer clothes, video games, other forms of entertainment, or a new car. After you identify an item as a need or want, you must exercise self- control to avoid caving to your desire for too many wants.

ACTIVITY 65.1

List the last ten purchases you made, and place each of them in the category you think is correct.

Table 65.1
Item Need Expense $ Want Expense $
Totals

How do your total “need” expenses compare to your total “want” expenses? Should either of them change?

Budgets are done in a chart or spreadsheet format and often look like the ones below. Pay attention to how the first budget differs from the second.

Table 65.2 This budget balances because all money is accounted for.
Income (use net monthly pay)
Paycheck $2200
Other $300
Total Income $2500
Saving and Investing
Savings Account $120
Investments $240
Amount Left for Expenses $2140
Expenses (Monthly)
Housing $750
Car Payment/Insurance $450
Groceries $400
Restaurants/Food Delivery $100
Internet $60
Phone $60
Medical Insurance and Copays $120
Gas $200
Total Expenses $2140
Balance (Amount left for expenses minus total expenses) $0
Table 65.3 Note that this budget is out of balance because Restaurants, Phone, and Gas are more expensive, so the total expenses are more than the amount available to pay for them.
Income (use net monthly pay)
Paycheck $2200
Other $300
Total Income $2500
Saving and Investing
Savings Account $120
Investments $240
Amount Left for Expenses $2140
Expenses (Monthly)
Housing $750
Car Payment/Insurance $450
Groceries $400
Restaurants/Food Delivery $225
Internet $60
Phone $75
Medical Insurance and Copays $120
Gas $250
Total Expenses $2330
Balance (Amount left for expenses minus total expenses) -$190

Balancing Your Budget

Would you take all your cash outside and throw it up in the air on a windy day? Probably not. We want to hold on to every cent and decide where we want it to go. Our budget allows us to find a place for each dollar. We should not regularly have money left over. If we do, we should consider increasing our saving and investing. We also should not have a negative balance, meaning we don’t have enough to pay our bills. If we are short of money, we can look at all three categories of our budget: income, savings, and expenses.

We could increase our income by taking a second job or working overtime, although this is rarely advisable alongside college coursework. The time commitment quickly becomes overwhelming. Another option is to cut savings, or there’s always the possibility of reducing expenses. Any of these options in combination can work.

Another, even less desirable option is to take on debt to make up the shortfall. This is usually only a short-term solution that makes future months and cash shortages worse as we pay off the debt. When we budget for each successive month, we can look at what we actually spent the month before and make adjustments.

Tracking the Big Picture

When you think about becoming more financially secure, you’re usually considering your net worth, or the total measure of your wealth. Earnings, savings, and investments build up your assets—that is, the valuable things you own. Borrowed money, or debt, increases your liabilities, or what you owe. If you subtract what you owe from what you own, the result is your net worth. Your goal is to own more than you owe.

When people first get out of college and have student debt, they often owe more than they own. But over time and with good financial strategies, they can reverse that situation. You can track information about your assets, liabilities, and net worth on a balance sheet or part of a personal financial statement. This information will be required to get a home loan or other types of loans. For your net worth to grow in a positive direction, you must increase your assets and decrease your liabilities over time.

Assets (Owned) – Liabilities (Owed) = Net Worth

ANALYSIS QUESTION

Can you identify areas in your life where you are losing money by paying fees on your checking account or interest on your loans? What actions could you take to stop giving away money and instead set yourself up to start earning money?

Table 65.4
Good Practices That Build Wealth Bad Practices That Dig a Debt Hole
Tracking all spending and saving Living paycheck to paycheck with no plan
Knowing the difference between needs and wants Spending money on wants instead of saving
Resisting impulse buying and emotional spending Using credit to buy more that you need and increasing what you owe

GET CONNECTED

You can write down your budget on paper or using a computer spreadsheet program such as Excel, or you can find popular budgeting apps that work for you. Some apps link to your accounts and offer other services such as tracking credit cards and your credit score. The key is to find an app that does what you need and use it.

Here are some examples:

Licenses and Attributions:

Original content: CC BY Attribution:

OpenStax College Success Concise 7.2 Savings, Expenses, and Budgeting. Access for free at: https://openstax.org/books/college-success-concise/pages/7-2-savings-expenses-and-budgeting

Baldwin, A. (2023). Savings, Expenses, and Budgeting. In College Success Concise. OpenStax.

Modifications: Swapped a quotation.  Removed mint example. Renumbered figures and tables.

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Chapter 65: Savings, Expenses, and Budgeting Copyright © 2024 by Amy Baldwin is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book