Posts Tagged Instant Gratification

Finance 101, a Must For Students Studying Finance



Many people are not well versed on the various issues regarding finance. They may not know where to get information or how to use the information that they gather to improve their financial status. It is important if you want to learn about finances that you acquire the services of a financial expert. They can be your teacher and you could learn a lot from them about the basic of money. Finance 101 is a class taught in college that helps students discover about the basics of finance.

Just because you are not in college does not mean that you do not need to gain additional knowledge on how to manage your money. It is important to broaden your horizons especially where your money is concerned. You need to have the proper facts in order to make sound financial decisions.

Most people learn about money the hard way, through trial and error. You get to learn a lot from the world around us and most times you have been living in a culture of instant gratification. The here and now is what is important and you must have the most fashionable thing on the spot. This is where most of us go wrong, and get credit card which just makes the situation more complicated.

It is important that you understand how to create a budget and stick to it. It is also advisable that you live within your means. Do not spend more that you earn. Another lesson to be learned regarding finances is to save as much as you can. This way you always have an exit strategy should there be an emergency. Use the financial tools that are available to boost your financial portfolio.

By: Mercy Maranga

About the Author:
Mercy Maranga writes content on Finance and Finance Management. Visit her site here for more information on Finance. Finance 101



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The Philosophy Of Personal Finance

Eastern philosophy is based on the concept of balance. The symbol of Yin/Yang illustrates the theory. (If you can’t visualize this symbol, a Google search will lead you to several illustrations of the Yin/Yang.) Day and night, good and evil, pleasure and pain, inner strength and physical strength are examples of opposites that need each other in order to maintain equilibrium.

The approach commonly used in personal financial planning focuses on a rigid set of rules that works well in business budgeting but fails too often when used by individuals. In developing a business plan the primary day-to-day expenses, such as rent and utilities are identified first. Then the next level of expenses is listed, and so on. Having all expenses prioritized in this manner allows for a systematic reduction of expenses when income targets are not met.

Individuals are told to do something similar. Review all personal expenditures and categorize them into two categories, “needs” and “wants”, forming a table.

After you pay for all your “needs”, you can then decide which “wants” can be fulfilled with whatever money that’s left after the “needs” are paid for. People fail to meet their goals with this system for several reasons:

We live in an “instant gratification” society. We’re encouraged to buy now and pay later making the distinction between “needs” and “wants” difficult. The rigidity of partitioning all expenses in a table form is intimating requiring a level of discipline that few people have. No expense fits neatly into either category. For example, you can pay $500.00 a month in rent or $5,000.00 a month. There’s no question that you “need” a place to live but there certainly is a “want” component in determining how expensive a place you decide to live in.

Developing this table is an effective starting point; after all you can’t reach your goal of improving your financial health without knowing your current position. It’s from here is where the concept of balance comes into play.

Visualize Yin/Yang in your mind, the black half is your “needs” and the white is the “wants”. There is fluidity in the boundary between the two halves of the circle. The “needs” and “wants” of your life not only continually cross back and forth but will straddle the boundary.

It’s only after you recognize this fluidity can you focus on understanding what you need to do and begin to implement your changes.

If you’re serious about improving you personal finances you need to acknowledge that it’s going to take time. No major change in life happens overnight. It’s also not going to be easy and mistakes will be made. Is it surprising that oriental philosophy also holds perseverance in high esteem?


By: Don Romano

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