Save More Money and Spend Less With These Financial Resolutions
Save More Money and Spend Less With These Financial Resolutions
From kids' allowances to interest rates, these figures will surprise you
Got a case of buyer’s remorse? You may not be stuck with that purchase
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Keeping Your Money Resolutions
Yes you can save more and spend less Here s how
Here's a confession: make me cranky. Wanting to save more and spend less is great; actually doing so is tough. So this year I've asked psychology and behavior experts for easy strategies to help us all stick with .Resolution #1 Save More
If your resolution for 2013 was to become a runner, you wouldn't start by lacing up your Sauconys for a marathon. You'd begin by walking or taking a slow, steady jog. "Start with something you can succeed at," suggests Florida State University psychology professor Roy Baumeister, coauthor of Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength. "If you succeed at the first, it helps you do better at the second." So even if your goal is to stash away 10 to 15 percent of your pay, sequester 2 percent first. Live within those means for a couple of months, then nudge yourself up to 4 percent and so on. As you save, periodically online to revel in the climbing balances. You'll be spurred to keep going. Jonathan Kitchen/Getty Images 3 simple strategies to save more and spend less this year.Resolution #2 Spend Less
You can say "I'm going to cut my spending," but it's too easy to . For a dose of reality, link your accounts to an online budgeting site such as and let it show you — in glorious pie chart form — exactly where your money is going every month. Mark Muraven, associate professor of psychology at the University of Albany, also recommends "precommitment": creating barriers that reduce temptation. Examples: Take all but one of your credit cards out of your wallet, or unsubscribe from alluring email shopping blasts. And tone down what experts call "transformation expectations," the notion that buying a costly tablet computer or pricey luggage will change your life. People who ponder the impact of purchases spend about 20 percent less than those who don't, because they realize they don't need the fanciest item, says Ryan Howell, assistant professor of psychology at San Francisco State University. Howell is also cofounder of , a free website that can help you analyze — and reform — your shopping behavior.Financial Planning
From kids' allowances to interest rates, these figures will surprise you
Got a case of buyer’s remorse? You may not be stuck with that purchase
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts.