How to reach your short-term savings goals
These tips will help you save for your next short-term savings goal.
The post How to reach your short-term savings goals appeared first on Discover Bank – Banking Topics Blog.
These tips will help you save for your next short-term savings goal.
The post How to reach your short-term savings goals appeared first on Discover Bank – Banking Topics Blog.
Why is this year different from all other years for seniors? Inflation. The latest numbers show a whopping inflation rate thatâs the highest since 1982. This means that everything you buy will be more expensive. You see this impact at the gas pump, the grocery store, the doctor and, frankly, all over. The issue is that you donât have a choice not to buy certain things.
Itâs interesting, because, we sort of have a love-hate relationship with our financial world. We love that the economy is back roaring at a full-employment rate and that almost anyone can get a job if they want one. We also love that wages are going up and that we are back in the car and eating out and traveling. But at the same time, we hate that this growth breeds inflation, resulting in costs for everything rising. We also may support the Ukrainians in their war with Russia, but we hate the costs to us.
As we celebrate national Womenâs History Month this March, itâs a great moment to take a look at all of the pressures and pulls on womenâs time and energy. The pandemic has exacerbated the âtypicalâ issues facing the sandwich generation by creating even more challenges for women, in particular. This should no longer be called the sandwich generation for women, but instead, the club sandwich generation.
This clever term refers to the generation (consisting of women, in most cases) being caught, or sandwiched, between kids who are struggling financially and need help and elderly parents who are also struggling and need help. These simultaneous burdens on women during the pandemic have heightened their financial and emotional stress.
Women, in greater numbers than men, have had to take off work to care for kids who couldnât go to school; take off time from work to care for their adult children returning to the nest because they may have lost their jobs or became ill; and also, take time off to care for and take parents to doctors.
Itâs because the real âmeat in the sandwichâ (women) are worried about not having enough âbreadâ to support all the generations relying upon them for financial help. The pressures mount as life shifts. People are living longer, which is great, but that also means that elderly parents may need more help for a longer period of time. That translates into the sandwich generation often having to give up their work to care for their parents. The sandwiched women may be raising their own younger kids, and then couple that with their older kids moving back home, and we have a recipe for real financial burden.
The big deal is that women are still the caregivers, in most cases. They are pulled in too many directions. As discussed, the pandemic forced many to leave the workplace to handle all of these circumstances. Many moms are single and are under even more pressure.Â
The first thing to consider is to try to balance all of your obligations and try not to be stretched so thin that you burn out because so many people depend upon you. Although it may sound impossible, you need to even schedule a daily âtime-outâ for yourself to take a walk or to meet or Zoom with a friend. Once you do, youâll be more âpresentâ to help the others in your life.
Talk to your kids and parents about sharing all the household responsibilities. Older kids may have to pitch in with caring for their grandparents. Maybe older kids could help with cleaning the house and taking Grandma or Grandpa to the doctor.  Younger kids can even help by spending time with their grandparents. They could play cards or Scrabble or a watch TV with them. Also, grandparents may be healthy enough to be in charge of the younger kidsâ homework, or babysitting for them. This will not only free up some time for you, but may save you some money, as well.
Design a family budget with the whole family, all of the generations, in mind. The adult kids may have to take jobs that donât meet their expectations. Be honest about what you can and canât afford. Ask each member what they are willing to sacrifice. Give them each a goal to reduce their expenditures. Maybe they each have to figure out how to save, say, $50 a week to contribute back into the family budget. Let them come up with ways to save. If your parents shouldnât be driving, it is a perfect time to get rid of their car and insurance costs.Â
Your younger kids can think about cutting down on family discretionary spending on entertainment; everything from designer coffee to streaming services. Set up a family challenge to rotate the making of meals, including the freezing of an extra meal. This will help you to save time and money. Shop in bulk. You get the point.
Itâs tempting to start to liquidate or borrow from your retirement savings, but there are consequences. Try not to touch that money, because itâs so hard to build that back up again. Think about the consequences of you just kicking the can down the road for your kids, who could then become the next sandwich generation financially caring for you.
There are lots of professionals to help you to navigate these choppy financial waters and to design a plan forward. Also, many communities are offering support groups; you are not alone. You may learn of new resources and coping skills. You may have thought somewhere in your mind that this could happen, but you canât understand it until you are knee-deep in the situation.
We know that you are capable of doing everything â work, family, friends, volunteering, all of it. Letâs face it, as we look at celebrating Womenâs History Month, you need to also celebrate yourself. You are the lynchpin of the family.
Itâs hard to think that there is a bright spot when you look at the death and destruction that the pandemic brought to so many. But if we step back, letâs see if there has been a silver lining for some.
We canât forget the backdrop of the pandemic. We were petrified as we went into 2020, as people got sick and businesses started to shutter. We had no defenses from the disease or from losing our loved ones and livelihoods. Unemployment surged to levels not since the Depression. But help was on the way. The government poured trillions of dollars into the economy; people received real money via two rounds of stimulus payments; the government also paused mortgage and student debt payments for millions of people; the Fed kept liquidity flowing into our economy; inflation and interest rates were negligible.Â
According to the Census Bureau, stimulus payments lifted 11.7 million people out of poverty. In other words, almost 12 million more people would have been considered impoverished if Congress had not acted to alleviate the situation.
The stimulus checks were delivered to people both above and below the poverty line.  We know that not everyone benefited equally, and many people are still in a tenuous position. But if you were working and Zooming from home in your PJs, you didnât need to buy work clothes or spend money commuting to the office. You werenât traveling or going out to eat. So, for those who were lucky enough to keep their jobs and were not trying to just survive, the stimulus checks were a bonus. Working from home allowed many to reduce their expenses. Their mortgages and student loans were on pause, and they diligently increased their savings. These people amassed $2.7 trillion in extra savings.
The personal savings rate, which is a measure of how much money people have left over after their expenses and taxes, soared to almost 33% in April 2020, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. For the two years before the pandemic, it had averaged just under 8%.
According to a report from NerdWallet and Goldman Sachs, families in the top 20% of income put more than a third of their extra savings into investment accounts or down payments on homes, and lower-income families mostly kept their extra savings in banks or used it to pay down debt. Whatâs interesting, as noted in the report, is that, âThe majority of Americans (78%) report that the pandemic has spurred them to take some sort of financial action.â
Americans also paid down some of their credit card debt during the pandemic. Over $100 billion in credit card debt has been paid off by consumers due to the influx of stimulus money. People also had fewer places to spend money, but still they could have been clicking away online, and didnât. Before you jump for joy, the average cardholder still has more than $5,000 of credit card debt.
I wish I could see the trends of spending less, saving more and paying down credit cards continue ⦠but no. We noted a great holiday shopping boom, even the midst of rising prices due to supply chain issues and inflation. Holiday spending increased by 11% for online sales and over 8% for in-store sales.
Optimism about improved finances in 2022 is highest among Generation Z, those born from 1997 to 2012, and diminishes with each successive older generation, based on Bankrateâs survey findings.
Gen Zers and millennials who said they felt optimistic about 2022âs finances most often attributed it to making more money at work, while baby boomers who felt positive cited having less debt.
Some of this optimism is based upon the fact that the younger generations are expected to enjoy higher wage increases in 2022. Pundits say that the expected 4% wage increase is due to the current soaring  7.48% inflation rate, as food, housing and gas prices are spiking. I think it also has to do with the fear of losing good employees. Last year the job market lost over 38 million workers during the Great Resignation, to seek fame and fortune elsewhere. The raise many will receive may not be a reflection of a job well done, but more of a plea not to leave.
The pandemic can be seen as a really tough wake-up call. It stills looms over our nationâs health. Financial health is part of your overall health. Itâs not about how much you earn, itâs about how much you save and spend to create a stress-free life for you and your loved ones.
If you overspent on the holidays, and spoiled your kids in the process, nowâs the time to make some changes.
Itâs tough to change, but your job could depend on it. Be flexible in your career goals â and talk with your kids about their own aspirations, because if you want to be employed for the long haul, you need to think about how industries are changing.
With Motherâs Day around the corner, moms everywhere can rejoice in knowing that they tend to leave a positive impact on their childrenâs financial lives. A survey finds 81% of Americans saying their mothers shared financial wisdom with them and…
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When I was in the 7th grade, my bestie at the time and I wanted to save up for a shopping spree. We put our middle-school brains together, and devised ways we could earn enough to buy whatever we pleased…
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