Getting Started With Savings
1 When you’re in your twenties, retirement seems
so abstract, it might as well be thousands of years
away. Maybe it feels something like that to you right
now. Why save for something so many decades in the
future, when every last dollar is accounted for in the
here and now? Saving for anything at all, in fact, may
feel impossible.
2 Getting started early for retirement is smart for
the same reasons you may want to put it off: time is
on your side. If you set aside what you can now, the
magic of compounding numbers — when you begin to
earn interest on interest — can do more of the heavy
lifting over time. In other words, saving early may
result in having to save less over the long run, which
will take some pressure off as you’re juggling other
demands that inevitably arise. Maybe those demands
will be children and all the money they require, or
perhaps you’ll need some time off to care for an aging
parent.
3 And (mostly) nobody wants to work forever —
the earlier you start saving, the sooner you can stop
working and dedicate more time to what’s meaningful
to you. The easiest way to save — for everything, really
— is automating. When you have money automatically
and regularly transferred to its destination, you don’t
have to remember to do anything. That goes for
purely pleasurable financial goals as well, like saving
for a big trip. It’s empowering, and will bring you closer
to the things that make you both happier and more
financially secure. It will take some time and patience
— but your future self will thank you.
4 Before you begin saving, though, make sure
you have a plan to knock out any high-cost debt, like
debt on credit cards, where interest rates (around 22
percent) far exceed the money you might earn when
investing your savings in the stock market over time
(7 to 8 percent).
5 Besides that, get a copy of your pay stub or
check your direct deposit to get a sense of your
take-home pay. (Freelancers should calculate their
average monthly income.) Then write down all of your
expenses — rent, all insurance not already deducted
from your paycheck, utilities, groceries, transportation
costs, car payments, mobile phone, student loans and
any other debts.
6 Moreover, creating a financial cushion — in the
form of an emergency savings fund — can help you
avoid turning to credit cards if you suddenly lose your
job or hit a financial pothole, like covering a $1,000
car repair.
7 Financial planners suggest keeping three to
six months of your expenses in emergency savings
(deposited in a high-yield online savings account,
which offer the best rates). That may seem like a lofty
goal when you’re living on a starting salary that barely
covers your bills. So start small, even if it’s saving $50
a month — $83 a month will get you to $1,000 in a
year — and add more if and when you can afford it.
Set up an automated plan that sweeps that amount
from your checking account to your savings account.
Then, don’t touch that money.
8 Many people with student loan debt often wonder
if they should focus on paying down those loans before
saving for retirement. The short answer: probably not.
But there’s a strong case to be made to both invest
and pay down your loans simultaneously, if you can.
9 Besides retirement, you surely have other savings
goals. Maybe you’re saving for a car, a wedding party
or a special trip. Since these goals have a shorter time
horizon than retirement, or something you’ll need to
access within three years or less, you’ll want to take
less risk with this money. The easiest strategy is to
automatically transfer money into a high-yield online
savings account, say, monthly. With short-term goals,
the amount you save is far more important than your
return.
10 But if you need the money in three to 10 years —
call that a medium-term goal — you may have more
options, depending on how flexible you can be with
your timing. Even if you don’t have large amounts to
save now, setting up the infrastructure to save is the
hardest part — and as your earnings increase, it will
be much easier to save and invest more.
BERNARD, T. S. Getting started with savings. The New York Times. Your money, May 17, 2024. Available at: https://www. nytimes.com/2024/05/17/your-money/saving-money.html. Retrieved on: July 12, 2024. Adapted.
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