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Articles
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Retiring SMSF baby boomers
Your retirement-savings check-up
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SMSFs and the cost factor
New SMSF trustees sign-up - by the thousands
Do a budget

Budgeting is very important to better financial management. (A longer article about overall financial literacy follows the first few points).

 

 

 



     

 

 

However, working on a Budget may not be your cup of tea but when things are tight there is no better way to manage how your money is spread around.

The Financial Tools that can be accessed on this website are comprehensive and free for you and your family to use 24/7 and are what you need to budget better.  These tools are on your Accountant's website so if you have a question you don't have to go far for an answer.

Being able to develop and manage a Budget on an ongoing basis has always been an important aspect of gaining better control of our financial affairs. Unfortunately, completing this task on a regular basis has always been difficult, time consuming and at best ad-hoc. 

When you feel the urge then a quick trip to your Planner's website has all the tools you need and more.

For example, as well as doing a budget you can develop and test some Super strategies or complete a cash flow analysis.  While these tools are great for all existing clients and staff they are also useful for family members to utilise.

It is never too early for children and young adults to gain a better understanding of their financial position or to improve their financial literacy. 

Your Financial Planner


Cracking the money code

Literacy is the key that unlocks a world of knowledge. In the investment world financial literacy is how investors can crack the code of our sophisticated and at times complex world of money.

The issue of financial literacy is both broad and multi-layered. At one end of the spectrum there are those people who are effectively shut out of the modern financial system because their lack of financial literacy means they cannot access even the most basic of financial products.

The National Australia Bank first commissioned research by the Centre for Social Impact back in 2011 and recently updated the work in June 2013. It defines financial exclusion where individuals lack access to appropriate and affordable financial products such as transaction accounts, general insurance and a moderate amount of credit.

The research found that about 17 per cent of the adult population in Australia are either fully or severely excluded from financial services. A big concern is that the figure is rising not falling.

Improving financial literacy is a significant challenge and there are a range of initiatives underway including getting basic money management skills embedded in the school curriculum nationally.

This week is MoneySmart Week an ASIC initiative designed to encourage Australians to take steps to make a positive difference to their money health. It is an independent not-for-profit initiative involving over 100 organisations from the private, public and community sectors.

ASIC also has responsibility for implementing a national financial literacy strategy and a strong focus of that strategy is looking at improving educational pathways and content.

That is to be applauded but clearly this is an issue that ranges from the basic - understanding mobile phone contracts, credit card debts and household budgeting - right on up to more sophisticated challenges like understanding your superannuation.

As our superannuation system continues to grow and mature it is likely to have an ever-increasing role in educating Australians around long-term savings and planning for their retirement.

Australia's superannuation system is world-class in terms of a system structured to build retirement savings. But one of its core strengths - the mandatory nature of contributions from salaries - brings with it the issue of lack of member engagement because the majority of fund members do not actively make decisions either about the fund or the investment approach.

By its design there is a paternalistic side to our super system that works in a behavioral sense against fund members being fully engaged with their super account in the same way that they are with their banking or credit card accounts.

Ask yourself - or friends/work colleagues - when was the last time you checked your super fund balance?

The other factor working against super is its long-term nature - it is not hard to put off doing something when you can't get your hands on the money for 30 years.

Financial literacy is an essential life skill if people are to function and succeed in the modern world. Education and banking services are clearly on the front line of improving financial literacy, but increasingly there must be a role for super funds because they are going to be much more integral in people's lives as the system grows and the population ages.


By Robin Bowerman
Smart Investing
Principal & Head of Retail, Vanguard Investments Australia
3rd  September 2013

 

 

 



18th-October-2013