A friend occasionally uses a daily prompt idea blog to get ideas for posts. I've been kinda sporadic lately and I thought "what a great idea!" You can see examples of her successful use of daily prompts here.
Of course, if I found the prompt too boring I planned to skip it. And so began the week of MOST BORING DAILY PROMPTS EVER.
Today the prompt is: "Dig through your couch cushions, your purse, or the floor of your car and look at the year printed on the first coin you find. What were you doing that year?"
First off, my couch and my car have no coins in them. I checked. My purse does, but I might as well answer the question "what were you doing the last time you used coins?" Coins! Sheesh.
Anyway, back to homework with me, hopefully tomorrow's prompt is more interesting to me.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Sunday, February 17, 2013
CFO of the Family
I read a fascinating article about whether or not
couples should share bank accounts. It doesn't really apply to my marriage,
Adam and I basically merged finances as soon as we started our first jobs out
of college. But one line really got my attention: "If one
partner is relegated to being the “chief financial officer” of the
relationship, it could cause strife if the other partner feels left
out."
I am the chief financial officer of my relationship. Why wouldn't I
be? I love tracking financial data. This week I spent a few hours setting up a
Mint.com account (finally!). I first heard about mint over a year ago, but I
was lazy. Basically, I finally wanted some graphs on how much Adam and I spend on
restaurants and alcohol and I have never been motivated enough to get Excel to do
it. Also, now I can give Adam the username/password and he can see all
our our general financial info in one place. As he put it: "I'm the Chief
Auditor." He assures me that he doesn't feel left out.
I've noticed that
most of the people I associated with before grad school seemed to have one of
two ideas about managing their finances. Either they were just plain bad at it
or they were intensely conservative about money.
The bad with money camp was
guilty of all the usual things: using credit cards excessively, buying things
they really couldn't afford, forgetting about bills, etc. I have less of these
friends now as I've gotten older; often I've noticed people get better with
money as they age.
The conservative camp is also guilty of some odd financial
decisions. Some always paid with cash then found at age 25 that they
had no credit rating at all, even friends with past bad choices had an easier
time buying houses and cars. Others vigilantly paid off loans but ignored
rates, often paying higher rate loans later.
I was raised to be in the
conservative camp, but I try not to take it to extremes. I have a credit card
that I use for everything, but I pay it off every month and I use the reward
points to buy discounted gift cards at stores I go to frequently, or to lower
my balance when I make a large purchase like the house. I let professionals
conservatively manage my retirement accounts but I will open a brokerage
account for my own investment strategies later this year. The family cash flows
are protected by life and disability insurance policies and a small pile of
cash.
I wonder, is it really hard for people to manage their money? Do they just hate
doing it? One thing I've noticed is how important having cash and good credit
is. I get discounts on things because I can buy them up front (cell phones, car
insurance), or I get discounts because I have good enough credit to get 12
month-same-as-cash deals (furniture, home improvements). Because I have money,
it's easier for me to save money. It's really not a very fair system. One thing
I would like to see is instant credit report access provided either for free or
very cheaply. Once a year seems like an odd restriction.
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