Once we
established how much we were over-spending now comes the fun part of how to
trim 39% from our current non-existent budget. Using the budget percentage for after tax
guidelines, which took me the better part of five hours to do, I came up with a
budget that adds up to 100%.
http://www.mymoneycoach.ca/_Library/docs/Budgeting_for_After_Tax_Income.pdf
The timing of
us doing this comes when we are running out of options as to how we are going
to pay the bills this month. We are at the point of needing to do something
immediately to fix this or else financial disaster is around the corner.
Anxiety attacks aside, I am feeling a little relief after going through this
process and seeing that there is hope.
So how do
you trim 39%? Or for the average Canadian families spending habits…… 63%?
I started with laying out the fixed costs, the ones that I could do nothing about renegotiating at this time. These are items like our mortgage payment, house and car insurance, fuel oil payment, electricity costs, car loan, cell phones and RESP loans for the kids. Some of these things could be negotiated down the road but they are not going to help us when dealing with immediate cash drain problems.
I started with laying out the fixed costs, the ones that I could do nothing about renegotiating at this time. These are items like our mortgage payment, house and car insurance, fuel oil payment, electricity costs, car loan, cell phones and RESP loans for the kids. Some of these things could be negotiated down the road but they are not going to help us when dealing with immediate cash drain problems.
Then I
dealt with each category based on the budget guideline percentages of after tax
income spending to evaluate what needs to be trimmed.
For
housing, we were actually in line with 31% of our income going towards the
mortgage, taxes, insurance and fuel oil.
Next up was
utilities, where we were overspending by 12% as opposed to the suggested
5%. Our cell phones are locked into a
three year plan (gah!) with 18 months more to go. I had already negotiated with
fees last spring and had $70 knocked off the bill by reducing services and
changing the package.
Almost like
a gift from the gods, I received a flyer for Fibre Op from Bell which would
reduce our bundle for cable, internet and home phone for only $99 for a year,
no contract. Initially, even though this seemed promising, I figured it would
be more frugal if we just cancelled the whole damn thing, instead using our
cell phones, skype and getting a basic internet package.
Yes,
internet for our average Canadian family is a necessity. Our schools for our
children don’t even communicate with us by phone or letters home anymore. Plus, there is my blog, facebook and we live
a million miles away from any of our family.
To get a
cell phone long distance package from Rogers to cover our phone time with our
two parents who have yet to embrace any form of technology beyond a home phone,
it was going to be substantially more per month than what we are currently
paying for our home phone. Frustrating! Yes, but I didn’t let that stop me from
exploring what it would cost us for just having internet with Eastlink, and no
bundle.
Guess what?
It would amount to a savings of $15 per month. Well, whoopity-do, I’m gonna go
buy myself a motorcycle with those savings. I explained to Eastlink that I was
thinking about dropping them as a service and that for $15 more than what they
were suggesting for only internet, I could have Fibre op cable, internet, home
phone and a PVR for a year! I asked if they could offer anything better. They
said, “Nope”. I said, “It’s been nice knowing you.”
We have the
Fibre Op guy from Bell installing today. We saved $61 by switching companies
which cut over 2% off the Utilities budget.
With some other trimming, we are now down to 9% which is over the
suggested 5%, but my guess is that whoever made this guideline did so before
technology became a necessity.
Food cost
is something that I find really easy to manage in terms of trimming. That being
said, it also the easiest place for me to spend since who doesn’t feel like
anything that you put in your cart seems justified since it goes towards
keeping your family healthy and well nourished….maybe sometimes a little too
well nourished since both me and my husband are about 20 lbs overweight.
We are not
huge eater outers but we did spend money on a couple of places last month that
were completely over our non-budget. Definitely, no eating out! No rum or wine
or beer….all the sobbing and crying aside, it is an easy expense to trim or so the experts say. J
Next trim
the budget from 19% to 11%. That means for us, we go from having $1000 to spend
on food (which is average…they say $200 per person and we have 5) to spending
$600. I divided that further and left $500 for food, $50 for house stuff (paper
products, ect.) and $50 for personal stuff (razors, pads, deodorant).
Transportation
we were good with 15% of our budget going towards car loan, gas, maintenance
and insurance. There’s not a lot that we can trim anyways, other than more
stay-cations and less overall driving to avoid paying for additional gas. We
are lucky that we live close to work but unlucky in that we pay higher gas
prices than in other provinces or countries. There is no choice between
companies since we get gouged no matter which station we choose.
Clothing
was an easy one and I even further reduced it to 2% because we have always
relied on used clothes, great deals and grandparents. There is no shame in
second hand and often times I can find way cooler things than those that are in
our standard big box boring stores anyways. I have this great looking leather
retro 70’s jacket that cost me $5. I feel totally hot in it, way hotter than I
would in a new $500 jacket that would make me feel guilty because I spent half
our mortgage on a coat.
Personal and Discretionary Spending is where
we completely drop the ball every month. I didn’t even realize that some of our
current spending is locked in as a fixed cost since our daughters both have
music lessons that cost $80 a month. Grandma pays for the other half, thank
goodness, but when I looked at trimming this, I simply didn’t have the heart.
We have a
family gym pass that costs us $60. We use it for skating, swimming, squash and
exercising with equipment. Don’t know why we are still overweight but thank
goodness we still get exercise! A family fitness tax credit at the end of the
year helps me justify the expense. Lastly, we donate $10 to David Suzuki and
have done this for more than 10 years, again a tax credit, but more fixed costs
to consider.
After some
discussion, we decided to keep these things for now, provided that we reduce
our spending from a whopping 24% to 5%. Next month will be the ultimate test to
see if we can stick to this, the consequence of not doing so will result in us
losing the above.
Someone
near and dear to us is watching our children in our home afterschool which we
love. This was our toughest decision to make since we can’t get a better
arrangement. After making a few phone calls, we find that we could cut our
childcare budget by 5% if we used the afterschool excel program located at our children’s
school. Tough call? You bet! This is a decision that affects someone we love and potentially our kids happiness.
We are
fortunate to have not one, but two medical plans. Only thing is, we have been
too stupid and/or lazy to use them properly. Really, how difficult is it to
fill out paperwork? In our home, the only excuse we have is that we are too
friggin’ busy……it’s a lame excuse when we realized how much additional revenue
could be coming in to cover our month to month cost for dental, medical and
optical expenses.
Through a
few quick phone calls, I found out how to submit my paperwork for the remaining
amount that my husband’s plan does not cover. In the process, I found out that
the company I work for puts in extra flex dollars to cover any extras not
covered by our medical plan.
Imagine my
surprise when I found out that I have almost $2000 in monies that we could have
been using over the past year! What an idiot I am! We set our medical budget at 2% budget per month because we still need
to pay for the damn cat, in case we have vet bills. (I love my kitty, don’t
get me wrong, but they can be expensive. Her last vet bill cost more than what
we paid to purchase her from the local SPCA. It’s ridiculous!)
This leaves
us with the recommended 5% towards that ever evasive thing called Savings. We
already have fixed costs going towards RESPS so hopefully our kids can have a
decent education and be smarter than we are. Luckily too, our RRSPS come out of
our income and don’t factor into the month to month spending, otherwise we
would have nothing towards our retirement.
The remaining amount will, in theory, create a buffer of savings, if
we stick to the budget.
Last and we
wish it was least, our debt. We currently have decided to spend the maximum
recommended amount so that we can get as much paid off before interest rates
change in Canada. That means that we will be spending 15% per month towards our
existing debt on a roofing job and flood damage to our home.
We are your
average Canadian family and we have been spending our way into poverty.
Awsome job and well wishes on the journey.
ReplyDeleteWell done! I believe you have done the hardest part, paying attention and writing it down is the part most people do not do. Yes, sticking to it may be a challenge but you know what you are doing, why you are doing it AND you have in essence made yourself accountable through the blog. And you are setting a great example for many others.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the support Elle and Draus. There's no doubt that accountability is huge with a blog! :) Even if it is imaginary and no one reads or comments, just by the shear habit of writing, thinking, processing and then trying to come up with solutions will give me the push we need to stay on track. If I can turn this boat around, then I feel I will be able to help others too. All the best!
ReplyDeleteMandy, I have learned over the years that just because people don't comment does not mean they are not reading it . . . you will never know how many people you touch or help with this writing :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Elle for the inspiration to keep going. It's been amazing to be able to have conversations with other families that we know who are dealing with the same issues. I know there are some that are reading and not commenting based on the insights. There are also a lot of people we know who seem to be curiously quiet which I understand. If I can help other families through this process, that would be great. Again, I am assuming that we have the capability of reversing our debt and changing our approach towards money management along the way. Cheers!
ReplyDelete