Some things to think about this year – and every year.
This is the year!
Yes, you can make 2009 the year you alter your financial
life for a better financial future. Let’s look at some steps
you might think of taking with the goal of financial freedom
in mind.
No, we’re not talking about those ridiculously obvious steps
the usual articles recommend, like “write your goals down”
and “set a budget”. Let’s go past the clichés and get into
the real issues.
Look at your income source, your expenses and your debt.
How do you earn income? If you earn it from one source, is
there effectively a ceiling on it, or is there real
potential for your income to rise in the next few years? Now
look at your core living expenses, the ones you can’t avoid
(such as a mortgage payment, car payment, etc.). Can any
core expenses be reduced? Investing aside, you position
yourself to gain ground financially when income rises, debt
diminishes and expenses stay (relatively) the same.
Maybe you should pay your debt first, maybe not. If you are a business owner or
a professional, for example, you’ll likely always have some
debt. Your ultimate goal should be to build wealth – and you
can plan to build wealth and minimize debt at the same time.
Some debt is “good” debt. A debt is “good” if it brings you
income. If you buy a rental property, you’re paying a
mortgage, but that’s considered a “good” debt because you’re
getting passive income from the rent payments. Credit cards
are “bad” debts.
If you’ll be carrying a debt for a while, put it to a test.
Weigh the interest rate on that specific debt against your
potential income growth rate and your potential investment
returns over the term of the debt. If the interest rate on
that debt looks like it will outpace your income growth and
investment returns, then you should really think about
paying that debt down fast, because you can’t afford that
interest rate.
Of course, paying off your debts, paying down balances and
restricting new debts all works toward improving your FICO
score, another tool you can use in pursuit of financial
freedom (we’re talking “good” debts).