{"id":3700,"date":"1953-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1953-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1953-vol-34-no-12-planning-personal-financial-stability\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:38:42","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:38:42","slug":"december-1953-vol-34-no-12-planning-personal-financial-stability","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1953-vol-34-no-12-planning-personal-financial-stability\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1953 &#8211; Vol. 34, No. 12 &#8211; Planning Personal Financial Stability"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Financial difficulties are distracting.                     They make it difficult for a person to do his best world.                     They lead to health-destroying worry. They are not of                     the sort that if you leave them alone they will go away.<\/p>\n<p> Our trouble is that while we plan in some detail for most                     of life&#8217;s activities, we neglect a vitally important step                     if all the other things are to work out well &#8211; we fail to                     make our money behave as it should.<\/p>\n<p>We become irritated when we see men and women with similar                     or smaller incomes getting more enjoyment out of living than                     we do. They seem always to have money with which to enjoy                     the bigger and better things which we miss so much. They have                     peace of mind, too.<\/p>\n<p>This Monthly Letter is written with the idea of giving hints                     and outlines of plans leading toward a sound financial system.                     Having a plan on paper is the only way we know of to tackle                     the problems of getting out of debt, making ends meet, acquiring                     the things you want, achieving security, and saving money.<\/p>\n<p>The plan you wish for is one that will help you decide where                     you want your money to go, send it there, and show you the                     score.<\/p>\n<p>It will bring your desires and the wishes of your family                     into focus. That act in itself will help you to decide which                     attainments mean most to you. From that point you can go on                     to divide your income to the best advantage, control expenses                     so as to get greatest life values, and provide the material                     security which contributes so greatly to serenity of mind.<\/p>\n<p>There is nothing miserly about planning in this way. Some                     people are inspired by the idea of putting money aside for                     a rainy day &#8211; which is wholly commendable &#8211; but they carry                     their obsession to the point where they seem to be always                     expecting another deluge. Ring Lardner says in one of his                     stories about Louis, who was saving for a rainy day: &#8220;his                     wife had long ago given up praying for rain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Thrift is good management of money. It means getting the                     most for your money over a long period of time. Sometimes                     it means deferring spending now in order that we may have                     more to spend later.<\/p>\n<h3>Making Choices<\/h3>\n<p>The important thing is for everyone to decide what is worth                     most to him, and then lay plans to get it.<\/p>\n<p>Human wants and desires are inexhaustible, but choices must                     be made between them because our resources for satisfying                     them are limited. The purpose of a budget plan is to give                     us a sharp picture of what is available for our desiring,                     and then show us how to buy the greatest material satisfaction                     possible.<\/p>\n<p>A survey among stenographers a few years ago showed wide                     variety in the spending of identical salaries. One girl would                     skimp on food so that she might have an apartment instead                     of a room; another would walk to the office to build up a                     fund for buying books; others saved on these and other items                     so that they might be always well groomed.<\/p>\n<p>These stenographers had weighed their wants, and had decided                     that the sum they spent in their way would give them more                     satisfaction than if they spent it in any other way.<\/p>\n<p>In his popular book <em>The Mature Mind<\/em>, H. A. Overstreet                     tells of Buddha&#8217;s search for happiness. Buddha tried out experiments                     on himself &#8211; many of them extreme and more or less futile                     &#8211; like trying to live on a few kernels of corn. He wandered                     about observing people in all their relationships, trying                     to get hold of the elusive causes of their miseries. After                     a while he made what he thought was a decisive discovery:                     men are miserable because they desire things, and because                     desire can never wholly be satisfied.<\/p>\n<p>As an example, consider the man who wants a home, a car,                     and an independent income 15 years hence. From a financial                     point of view, each will require about the same investment                     spread over these years. The man whose income will carry only                     one of them must choose what one. If he tries to handle two                     of them he automatically hurls himself into financial trouble,                     deprivation in other areas of life, the spectre of debt, and                     worry that saps his health so as to destroy his enjoyment.<\/p>\n<h3>Security<\/h3>\n<p>Mere mention of the word &#8220;security&#8221; is enough to panic some                     people into frantic search for a coveted key to happiness.                     If Abraham Lincoln were living today in the circumstances                     from which he worked his way to greatness, he would be certified                     as underprivileged and insecure. H. T. Webster drew a cartoon                     in his satiric vein, in which he pictured Lincoln&#8217;s log cabin                     bearing a sign: &#8220;ill-housed, ill-fed, ill-clothed.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Security today too often means being taken care of, and                     not as in Lincoln&#8217;s mind and time the outcome of a constant                     relationship between effort and reward.<\/p>\n<p>Actual security does not exist in human life, but the feeling                     of stability may be found by every man, each within his own                     environment. It is relief from tensions and anxieties and                     the gratification of wishes.<\/p>\n<p>A happy man needs opportunities of adventure almost as much                     as he needs security, but he requires a stable base from which                     to operate, and to which to return.<\/p>\n<p>To build personal financial stability lies within ourselves                     to a greater degree than some like to admit. To spend wisely,                     to anticipate money needs and prepare to meet them, to avoid                     obligations which cannot be met: these are steps toward stability                     of an enduring sort.<\/p>\n<p>A moderate income, wisely used, will enable a man to live                     reasonably well, to build adequate financial protection for                     his family, and to provide for his own old age a time relatively                     free from financial worries. But such a happy state of affairs                     does not come about by chance: it must be planned.<\/p>\n<h3>Emergency Fund<\/h3>\n<p>Some persons object to a budget plan because they say something                     unexpected may happen to upset it. Of course it will. But                     without a budget you just worry hopelessly: with a budget                     you know where the squeeze can be applied on routine items                     so as to take care of the unexpected.<\/p>\n<p>It is a fact uncovered by research people that financial                     emergency is not so much caused by expenditures on food, clothing                     and shelter, even on a too-high scale, as it is by failure                     to provide adequately for emergencies. Everyone should try,                     as a primary call upon income, to build up a reserve fund.<\/p>\n<p>This is not so difficult as it may appear to the person                     who is giving his first attention to budgeting. One tabulates                     all the emergencies he can think of which are likely to occur;                     then he determines which of them can be shifted to risk-bearing                     institutions, such as insurance companies, health contracts,                     and so forth; and finally he determines what amount is needed                     in liquid form and how much should be put into interest earning                     funds.<\/p>\n<p>Many people have written about the size of this reserve                     fund, but, helpful as such suggestions may be as rough guides,                     it is impossible to set fixed amounts. No two families have                     the same conditions, either of income or outgo. No two families                     encounter the same emergencies, illnesses, fires and accidents.                     No two families build up the same standards on which they                     wish to live, standards dictated by business connections,                     church affiliations, social traditions, school activities,                     and so on.<\/p>\n<p>Insurance offers the easiest way to provide what is decided                     upon as protection against life&#8217;s usual hazards. People insure                     to protect dependents; their insurance is a system of transferring                     the individual risk to a group in exchange for payment of                     a premium. &#8220;Insurance brings the magic of averages to the                     rescue of millions,&#8221; as Churchill once phrased it.<\/p>\n<p>That is for protection. To get ahead financially, a person                     needs a savings programme.<\/p>\n<h3>Savings and Investments<\/h3>\n<p>There is little satisfaction in putting away $5 or $50 a                     month just to see the money accumulate. The real joy is in                     having an objective, a desire for the future which our saving                     will enable us to satisfy. There is true contentment in looking                     back at the end of a year and seeing how, by refraining from                     frittering away money on things not really needed at the time,                     or not wanted very much, we have money in the bank to apply                     toward something ardently desired.<\/p>\n<p>Savings should not be left lying around in dresser drawers                     or in desks. That practice has led to many heartbreaks because                     of theft, and it is dangerous, too, in the temptation it gives                     the owner to break into the savings for something of momentary                     appeal. A bank savings account is easily opened; the pass                     book becomes not only a good record of savings and accumulated                     interest but a source of inspiration and confidence.<\/p>\n<p>Samuel Pepys wrote in his diary on February 16th, 1660:                     I by having but 3d in my pocket made shift to spend no more,                     whereas if I had had more I had spent more as the rest did,                     so that I see it is an advantage to a man to carry little                     in his pocket.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>With the emergency fund and savings taken care of, it is                     time to think of investment in securities.<\/p>\n<p>To be classified as an investment, any stock or bond should                     possess at least these three qualities: safety of principal,                     conservative income, and saleability. While saving is a programme                     of gathering funds for specific purposes, investing is a programme                     of using funds to earn money which will be available when                     wanted.<\/p>\n<p>Formerly a matter for only the rich, today sees investment                     open to every worker. This spreading of ownership in corporate                     enterprises is one of the better features of our recent industrial                     and financial history. Canadian banks, for example, have some                     66,000 shareholders, ranging from men and women with one $10                     share each to some families which have many shares.<\/p>\n<h3>On Looking Ahead<\/h3>\n<p>Many of our financial difficulties are caused by failure                     to make proper provision for the expenses which must be met                     periodically during the year, such as insurance premiums,                     taxes, Christmas, furniture, fuel, clothing, vacation, and                     retirement fund or annuity payments. The budget is planned                     for yearly spending. It is hopeless to try to operate a budget                     on a weekly or monthly basis, because all weeks or months                     have not the same obligations.<\/p>\n<p>The best way is to set up an annual estimate of your expenses                     and then divide it into periods corresponding to your income                     receipt, weekly or semi-monthly or monthly. The sums                     being collected toward items which come up infrequently should                     be set aside every pay day in cash or in a bank account ear-marked                     for the purposes they are to serve.<\/p>\n<p>Count the number of pay days from now until the time the                     bill falls due, and figure the amount it will be necessary                     to save each pay day. If $25 will be due in five months, you                     will need to put aside an average of $5 a month: but once                     you get your budget rolling the $25 obligation recurring a                     year later will take only a little over $2 a month.<\/p>\n<p>In all this planning it is well to allow a margin to cover                     short guesses. Few of us can see clearly enough into the future                     to be certain of all our calculations. A saving and investment                     programme is a great protection and comfort, because the fund                     accumulated there can be switched at will to meet new demands                     or changes in desires.<\/p>\n<h3>When and How to Start<\/h3>\n<p>When you decide to budget, start right now. The time of                     year doesn&#8217;t matter, nor age, nor the state of your finances.                     Your only chance to control your money is before it is spent,                     and that applies whether you are a freshman in university                     or looking forward to retirement. Cato, the old Roman, started                     studying Greek when he was around eighty. Somebody asked him                     why he was beginning so large a task at such an advanced age.                     Cato said dryly that it was the youngest age he had left &#8211;                     and went on studying.<\/p>\n<p>Budgeting can be undertaken by degrees, and enlarged from                     time to time. The longest part of the journey is the first                     step. It is difficult because usually there are no adequate                     accounts of the preceding year&#8217;s experience from which to                     take off.<\/p>\n<p>Most family expenses fall into a fairly constant pattern,                     repeated month after month, and a skeleton can be built up                     from receipted bills and the family&#8217;s recollections. Then                     proceed to jockey the items around until estimates of expenditure                     match income.<\/p>\n<p>There is no such thing as a &#8220;standard&#8221; budget that will                     exactly fit your circumstances. No one else can know as well                     as you yourself what you need and want.<\/p>\n<p>The object &#8211; to make your money do what you want it to do                     in catching up with the past, caring for present needs, and                     building your happiness for the future &#8211; should be achieved                     with as little detail as possible. All you need for budgeting                     are a simple budget book and a place to keep papers. Don&#8217;t                     go in for involved bookkeeping; don&#8217;t buy an elaborate and                     expensive set of books (some institutions, including this                     bank, provide adequate budget books free); don&#8217;t set limits                     that are impossible to keep; don&#8217;t be so stern with your impulses                     that your budget becomes a kill-joy (remember, you are                     keeping it in order to get more of what you want most); and                     don&#8217;t be afraid to revise your budget in accord with what                     experience teaches.<\/p>\n<h3>Why Budgets Fail<\/h3>\n<p>It is probably safe to say that most failures in budget                     making are due to one of two things: trying to make a budget                     fit into some preconceived form or formula, or getting discouraged                     after too short a trial.<\/p>\n<p>Obviously, no formula budget, based perhaps on percentages                     of income to be spent for various items, will suit all families.                     Desires, standards and resources vary too greatly &#8211; and it                     should be recognized, too, that not all persons are able to                     exercise the same degree of restraint in spending.<\/p>\n<p>Some families get off to a bad start because they try to                     save too much. Favourite dishes disappear from the table,                     the Children&#8217;s pocket money is cut, tempers become frayed,                     and everyone is thoroughly uncomfortable until the good intentions                     collapse and a retreat is made to the old haphazard way of                     operating.<\/p>\n<p>Budgets may fail because they are only resorted to in time                     of trouble. It is not fair to panic into budgeting when the                     family finances are in big red figures, and then, having weathered                     the storm, to go back to the old way pending a new crisis.<\/p>\n<p>The budget must be made to work out in day-to-day                     buying. There is no use in cutting your paper estimates for                     clothing, entertainment or incidentals and then doing nothing                     practical about it. The expenses do not shrink automatically                     because you have put down smaller appropriations in your budget.<\/p>\n<h3>About Debt<\/h3>\n<p>Getting into debt is a destroyer of well-organized                     budgets. A survey was made by the U.S.A. Bureau of Labour                     Statistics into the spending habits of 10,813 families in                     91 big, middle-sized and small cities. The average family                     had $4,300 left to spend after paying about seven per cent                     of its original income in taxes. It actually spent $4,700.                     The $400 gap between income and outgo was bridged by piling                     up debts, tapping the family savings, and, in a few cases,                     by windfalls such as gifts and inheritances.<\/p>\n<p>There are dozens of reasons why families find themselves                     in debt, but families with spending plans can meet most emergencies                     and they have fewer unpaid bills than families which run finances                     haphazard.<\/p>\n<p>The first step toward getting out of debt is to list and                     total up unpaid bills; then reduce expenditures to a minimum                     which will not endanger health; then systematically apply                     net income to reduction of the debts. If a budget plan is                     explained to creditors they will be likely to respect your                     businesslike proposal for regular payments.<\/p>\n<p>Instalment buying has contributed to the extra comforts                     enjoyed by thousands of families. It is not objectionable                     if only a manageable part of future earnings is used and if                     the interest charges are not abnormally high. It is abuse                     of the plan, buying beyond one&#8217;s means, that prevents many                     salaried workers from getting ahead toward financial stability.<\/p>\n<p>To whatever extent a family decides to go into instalment                     purchases, it must protect its budget position by care and                     planning. Payments need to be met, and they form a peremptory                     claim upon income. This same stricture holds true with regard                     to charge accounts, which may be used safely if the budgeteer                     knows in advance what purchases are planned, and makes sure                     that the money will be available to meet the bill.<\/p>\n<p>Personal debt can cause an enormous amount of sorrow, but                     credit properly managed may be a way of increasing happiness.                     The difference is, again, one of choices. Borrowing within                     your capacity to make improvements in property that will enhance                     its value, or to install a labour-and-money saving                     machine, or to pay for education which will increase earnings                     &#8211; these are choices which will pay well.<\/p>\n<p>Borrowing to get out of debt &#8211; consolidating debts, as it                     is called &#8211; is sometimes justified. If you have bonds or other                     stock holdings, it will probably be better to borrow from                     the bank on their security than to sell them. When you sell                     an investment, you are killing the goose that lays the golden                     eggs; when you borrow on an investment you simply let the                     bank hold the goose as security, while you still get the golden                     interest eggs.<\/p>\n<p>Anyone can find out for himself whether he has good credit.                     Look at your budget, and if you find anything left over each                     month after making provision for paying living expenses, meeting                     future bills, reducing past debts, and building the emergency                     fund &#8211; what is left is the measure of your capacity to meet                     new credit obligations.<\/p>\n<h3>A Family Affair<\/h3>\n<p>Budget-making is primarily a family affair, though                     it can start individually with young people just as soon as                     they attain the stature of having a personal allowance. A                     school or university student has the same reason for planning                     expenditures that everyone has: to make money do the most                     possible in providing happy living.<\/p>\n<p>Two or three hints may help in budgeting at all ages. Don&#8217;t                     let anyone dictate how to spend your money. You know your                     ambitions: what you have to do is sit down with pencil and                     paper and devise the means whereby the money you have and                     what you reasonably expect to get will achieve what you want.<\/p>\n<p>Don&#8217;t be influenced by your parents&#8217; scale of living. They                     have been many years in reaching that point, and it is witless                     to think that you can start out from there, basing your starting                     scale of living on their attained goal. Be independent of                     neighbours&#8217; and friends&#8217; standards of living. Build your own                     plan to fit your own combination of desires and income.<\/p>\n<p>Throughout this Monthly Letter reference has been made to                     the budget in terms of the family. That is as it should be,                     because a budget must be a combined effort. Research in Chicago                     showed that 40.2 per cent of the desertion cases were rooted                     in financial tension between husband and wife, while 45 per                     cent of cases of cruelty had behind them financial tension.<\/p>\n<p>These grim reminders of the disturbing things that may happen                     when co-operative money management is neglected should                     spur every family to take united protective action at once.<\/p>\n<p>A budget session, with all the family participating in planning                     the future realistically, should be more interesting than                     a radio programme. Naturally, every member of the family cannot                     have an equal voice. The major contributors to the money income                     and the real income have a right to a major voice in decisions,                     and they have acquired skill and experience. But everyone                     can have a say in deciding what the family and its individual                     members expect out of life this year, next year, and other                     years. Then let them make appropriations that are in keeping                     with the realities of available and expected income.<\/p>\n<h3>Is It Worth While?<\/h3>\n<p>It may seem like a lot of effort to work out a budget plan                     for a family and to calculate carefully what will bring the                     greatest gain, but a valuable thing is all the more precious                     to us if it has been won by effort and thought.<\/p>\n<p>To provide financial stability by eliminating wasteful spending                     and encouraging useful saving; to build up toward what a family                     believes to be its best standard of living: these are what                     good budgeting offers. To be prepared for jolts, to predict                     and to influence to some extent the family&#8217;s future, to fit                     the economic facts of life to one&#8217;s possibilities and opportunities:                     these are achievements that are worth trying for.<\/p>\n<p>To find out, in the process, that the family is a unit in                     desiring the good of all rather than the greedy pleasure of                     each; that happiness is won by groups far oftener than individually;                     and that hospitable entertaining has less to do with extravagant                     spending than it has with the way you say &#8220;come over this                     evening&#8221; &#8211; these are by-products of budgeting that are                     beyond price.<\/p>\n<p>A well carried out budget plan offers stability, freedom                     from fear and worry, happier family relationships, increased                     efficiency, and personal satisfaction.<\/p>\n<p>All this results from answering in the affirmative the key                     question, and then doing something effectively about it: Are                     we planning our spending on the basis of what we want from                     life?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[33],"class_list":["post-3700","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-33"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1953 - Vol. 34, No. 12 - Planning Personal Financial Stability - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1953-vol-34-no-12-planning-personal-financial-stability\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1953 - Vol. 34, No. 12 - Planning Personal Financial Stability - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Financial difficulties are distracting. 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They make it difficult for a person to do his best world. They lead to health-destroying worry. They are not of the sort that if you leave them alone they will go away. 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