I have many female friends who don’t save money. I’m not sure why, but I have some ideas. Perhaps they’re waiting for their sugar daddy to save them. Who knows? I don’t mean to pick on the ladies at all…
…if anything, I mean to stress the importance of saving, not just for women, but for men too. It just seems that more women than men don’t invest their money.
When it all boils down, there’s just you and God and nobody else. How you live out the end of your days financially is not determined towards the end of your life. It’s determined now, and only you are responsible for how you behave with money.
Let’s do some simple math in terms of a Roth IRA retirement account. Currently you are permitted to contribute $5,000 annually to a Roth IRA, if you actually have one. Why is there a limit? Because as your Roth IRA grows, it grows tax free, so you’re limited to how much you can contribute to it. Did I mention it grows tax free?
“Big whoopie. $5,000 isn’t going to make me rich!”
You’re wrong. Let’s take a look at a simple calculation…but first, lets break that $5,000 into a monthly number of $5,000/12 = $416.66 (sounds suspiciously like the average car payment in this country.) Now, automatically deposit $417.00 into your Roth IRA every month, understanding that it’s out of sight, out of mind, until you retire.
Once you have your Roth IRA, you can direct where the funds in that account are invested, or you can pay someone to do it for you, but that’s the second part. Let’s go back to the hardest part…getting started. Let’s just get focused on saving that $5,000 every year. Once you have that going, you can think about where it goes.
Now, on to the growth of that money. To simplify the calculation, let’s say that you get an average rate of return over the next 20 years at 10% (very realistic.)
In 20 years, your total investment will be 20 X 12 X $417.00 = $100,080.00 but your account value will be $319,295.44!!! That’s $219,215.44 of FREE MONEY. Here’s an interesting way of looking at this. Let’s divide the free money by 240 (number of months in 20 years.) You get $913.40.
In other words, by NOT saving $417.00 every month, you’re throwing away $913.00 every month. Make sense?
But what if you have more time, which many of you do. Let’s bump that up to 40 years, assuming you start at age 30. 40 X 12 X $417.00 = $200160.00. Would you agree? In the previous example, your account balance was over $300K. In this example, you’ve supercharged your account over time and it will now be worth $2.66 MILLION DOLLARS. Your first million won’t happen until year 31, but only 9 years later you’ll exceed an additional 1.5 million. This is the power of compound interest. Once it’s in place, you can draw income from it. I don’t know about you, but when I multiple 2.6 Million X a modest 6% I get $156,000. That’s money working for you. Imagine being 59 1/2 (when you can start taking money out penalty free) with tax-free distributions of $156,000 annually for doing nothing. Not bad, assuming you started this when you were 20, which is a clear argument for starting immediately if you haven’t already.
On a 40 year timeline, what is it costing you per month to NOT save $417.00? This will blow your mind…
$5,122.88 PER MONTH.
So go ahead. Keep drinking your Starbucks, paying your car payments, going on 4 or 5 vacations every year, and spending all of your money on things that go down in value. Like Dave Ramsey always says, “I hope you like the car.”
OR
Restructure your financial behavior and re-write your monthly expense budget to cut out the excessive spending, because it’s costing you more than $5,000 per month NOT to save.
