Postby Kaligraphic » Sat Dec 04, 2004 12:50 am
The first thing to do is to gather information.
Write down everything you spend - every single thing (well, you can group (e.g. dinner foods, $47.59)) and keep doing that. At the end of each week, total up how much you've spent on what. Categorize your expenses to better spot spending patterns, and divide larger categories into subcategories to see where your money is really going. Sample categories and subcategories include:
Food
--Nutritious, store-bought food.
--Fast food/take-out/pizza
--Fancy food (real restaurants)
--Junk food
Clothing
Medical
Household (laundry detergent, cleaning supplies, that sort of stuff)
Personal care/hygiene (shampoo, deoderant, etc.)
Entertainment
--Movies
--Anime
--Star Trek Conventions
--Whatever (make your own subcategories)
School (I'm guessing you're in college)
--Tuition/fees
--Books
--Misc (scantrons, blue books, pencils, note paper, whatever)
And so on. Make note of all of your bills, and figure the monthly cost. You will be putting all of this information into a chart, showing the breakdown of your expenses.
Now, list your monthly income. This is the number you start with. A good initial goal is to make sure that you keep expenses lower than income. For that, you look at your list of expenses, and figure which ones you can reduce to achieve your goal. For instance, rent is typically not too variable, and changing locations is a bit of a hassle, so you don't want to start there. In accounting, there are two types of expenses associated with production - fixed and variable. (There's also a lot more to it, but if you're interested in accounting, you'd probably get more out of an actual accounting course than I could put in a post or two.) Anyway, I'm going to use the terms slightly differently from the actual accounting usage for this explanation.
Fixed expenses are incurred whether or not you do anything other than work - rent is a good fixed expense. Car insurance, gas to get to work, utilities, that sort of thing.
Variable expenses are incurred deliberately - for instance, clothing, food, entertainment, and the like are variable expenses. You can decide to have filet mignon every day and drive up the food cost, or live on dog food, and bring it way down. (living on dog food is not recommended.) The first place to control food is with the junk food, fancy food and fast food. You can control entertainment spending by, say, renting a movie to watch with friends (split the cost) instead of going to the movies. You can reduce your clothing costs by buying less or cheaper clothes.
Once you've gotten expenses to be less than income, decide on your next goal. Whether it's 50% to the church or 80% to savings, or trying to live on only 70% of your income, you have to choose your goal yourself for it to really change your spending habits.
If you want to use a preexisting expense chart, practicalmoneyskills.com has one, along with their own lesson on budgeting.
*edit* Wow, this turned out to be a long post */edit*
The cake used to be a lie like you, but then it took a portal to the deception core.