I was born in 1985 so if you do the math, that puts me very much in “Generation Y”.
Together, we’re a generation widely criticised for being lazy, bad with money and frivolous.
We’re said to be unwilling to work hard, lacking in budgeting skills and reliant on our parents for far too long.
We’re a generation who demands instant gratification with none of the appreciation for the value for money that our grandparents possessed.
Perhaps at times this may have been true of Generation Y, but with the rising cost of living, housing affordability and accumulated education debts, I for one am seeing a shift in thinking among my peers.
Slowly, as we find ourselves in the thick of families and house hunting, the mentality has changed when it comes to how we treat our money.
Nowadays, people are searching for smart ways to manage their money. Often you hear advice that you wish you’d known years ago.
Related: The 8 lessons I’ve learned from surviving financial oblivion.
For me, that was absolutely the case. So much of the advice I’ve heard recently has given me an “ah-ha!” moment of clarity which has highlighted that saving and managing your money doesn’t have to be hard – it’s just about putting simple measures in place to get it working the best way for you.
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#5 I respectfully disagree!
We have a {very} modest savings account - and we also have debt = a home loan and credit cards that mostly get paid off every month. But theres no way we're giving up our savings account! I feel safer knowing it's there for emergencies as well as goals such as holidays etc. No way I'd pay it against debt (mortgage etc) and forgo that comfort :)
#8 *sigh* bracing myself to do this in the next little while o.O
Me too I think that is nuts. Don't give up savings and throw all your spare cash at debt. You need both. Maybe one third to debt, the other third to savings. You always need some padding for 'you never know' things... car breakdown, replace fridge/ washing machine, loss of income etc.
The principle is a good one.
You can open an offset account which will offset the interest against your loan.
Say you have a 100,000 loan, but you have 10,000 savings. Put the 10k in the offset account and only pay interest on the 90k. U still have the flexibility of accessing the 10k when ever you want, however you want. It's the same as an everyday account.
Or even if you don't have an offset account, most loans you can redraw on the amount that you have overpaid.
Putting it in a savings account means you are paying unnecessary interest on that amount. You may be earning interest in the savings account, but the rate would be less than what you would save if you offset against your loan.
You're right, I can see the value in that :)
Hi Kate - #8 - it's just one website - the ATO's - and you do the search using your tax file number, not a very arduous or long exercise, but definitely worthwhile.