10 tricks for young adults to develop a savings plan
You may have your work cut out for you. A study by Wachovia and the Consumer Federation of America found that among all age groups, young adults ages 18 to 24 are the most likely to say they're not saving adequately (62 percent versus 52 percent for all Americans).
Asked about what keeps them from saving, they're more likely than the general public to cite psychological factors: spending to feel good (54 percent versus 29 percent), social pressure from friends or family (38 percent versus 20 percent), trips to the mall (32 percent versus 15 percent), and impulse spending (53 percent versus 37 percent).
So a little reverse psychology is in order. To mark Financial Literacy Month, with its emphasis on teaching young people to save, here are 10 psychological tricks guaranteed to help your friends (and you) spend less and squirrel away more:
• Save or invest automatically with a bank, a mutual fund or your retirement plan at work so that money is taken off the top of your paycheck before you see it or spend it. The surest way to save is to have someone else do it for you; no matter how much you make, you'll tend to spend it all.
• Limit yourself to one ATM withdrawal per week and make your cash last.
• Subtract credit-card purchases from your checking account immediately so you're not surprised when the bill arrives.
• When you subtract a payment from your account, round up the amount to the next dollar. That way, you'll always have a slush fund.
• Give yourself a 24-hour cooling-off period if you're waffling on a purchase. Chances are you won't go back.
• Buy a couple of storage bins even a shoebox will do in which you can collect credit-card and ATM receipts. That will help you get organized and give you a visual record of your spending.
• Toss spare change (and even stray singles) into a jar on your desk or dresser and watch your money grow to hundreds of dollars a year.
• Each time you resist the temptation to buy a latte or go to a movie, put the money you would have spent into your cash jar. It's an immediate reward for self-discipline.
• Once you finish paying off a loan or a credit-card balance, continue depositing the payment amount in a savings or investment account.
Janet Bodnar is deputy editor of Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine and the author of "Raising Money Smart Kids" (Kaplan, $17.95). Send your questions and comments to moneypower@kiplinger.com.



You can be the first to comment on this story.