Christian
Topic: Control Spending
December 02, 2004 - by Crown Financial Ministries
A good way to reduce debt is to develop
discipline in spending habits.
Spending is a habit
Does money burn a hole in your pocket?
Does buyer’s remorse set in after you have
spent your money?
If this sounds familiar, how can you manage your
spending so you can buy the things you need now
and also save for the things you need in the future?
In order to change spending habits, people must
first understand how habits are shaped and the
ways spending behavior can be changed.
In essence, they must identify spending leaks
that give immediate satisfaction but do not help
reach financial goals and, instead, substitute
desirable spending behavior that may not be immediately
gratifying but will allow financial goals to be
reached.
How to change the habit
Luke 16:11 says, “Therefore if you have
not been faithful in the use of unrighteous wealth,
who will entrust the true riches to you?”
People need to learn to handle the smallest thing
God has put under their authority—their
money. Therefore, if the following guidelines
are followed it should help them control spending.
1. Establish self-discipline. Put all spending
under God's control. In so doing, individuals
become managers of God’s finances and all
spending should then be from the vantage point
of whether He would be pleased with the purchase.
With God’s guidance, any bad habit can be
broken.
People need to learn to recognize the drive that
places them in a difficult spending situation.
When they shop, they can avoid the spending pitfalls
produced by that drive by having a purpose for
the shopping, a time limit, and a written plan.
Hence, they need to make a list before they go
shopping and then stick to it.
In addition, they should limit the number of trips
to the store or mall and never shop when hungry
or depressed.
2. How far money goes usually depends on how badly
people want something. As such, they need to be
in control of the money, under God’s direction,
instead of having the money control them by limiting
what they do.
Once spending has been brought under control,
there should be a determination of how much needs
to be spent each month in every area of an implemented
budget; and, since the basic idea behind budgeting
is to save money up front for both known and unknown
expenses, there must be a commitment to stick
to the budget.
If people are having difficulty with income equaling
outgo, they need to cut some of their outgo. As
such, they should look at their budgets realistically
and see where they can start trimming.
A budget is a money plan. With it, people can
organize and control their financial resources,
set and realize goals, and decide in advance how
money will work for the good of the family.
Therefore, because every purchase should be considered
in light of the established budget, buying any
non-budgeted items on impulse should be avoided,
especially if those non-budgeted items will need
to be purchased with a credit card.
3. People need to be accountable to other persons
for a specified period of time for everything
they spend. Ecclesiastes 4:9,10 says, “Two
are better than one because they have a good return
for their labor. For if either of them falls,
the one will lift up his companion. But woe to
the one who falls when there is not another to
lift him up.”
If there is accountability, people will be more
inclined to be cautious in their spending habits—a
look now, buy later attitude.
So, shop around before buying and learn to say
no. Keep a record of spending and purchases and
share these with the accountability partner.
4. Establish a want-to-buy list. Whenever people
feel they need to buy something that is not budgeted,
they should put it on the list. They should wait
seven days and find two additional prices for
the same item, to be sure they are getting a good
buy.
If they still want the item after a week has passed,
they will have thought about it and probably will
be getting the best buy on the item. However,
they still should not charge it.
Finally, people can have only one item on the
list at a time, so if they find new “wants”
during the week, they will have to decide between
the two.
Conclusion
A good way to reduce debt is to develop
discipline in spending habits. That may include
taking away any security that might be used in
case of emergencies: credit cards or other avenues
of borrowing.
By committing not to go further in debt, people
begin to reverse the process that produced the
debt. Then, they can develop a balanced budget
that will control spending and will allow them
to stay within the parameters of their financial
means.
© Copyright 2004, Crown
Financial Ministries. All rights reserved.
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