The post Wants vs Needs Challenge appeared first on Cheap Students.
]]>What you should do: Write your own list of your week, 2-week (however long you want) expenditures. Figure out if they are wants vs needs. Look over them again and make sure your needs really are needs and not in fact wants. Then evaluate how you are spending your money. Could you have made lunch more that week instead of buying food out? It’s definitely a great way to really think about how you are spending your money. You can be pretty surprised how all the little things add up.
Here’s a breakdown of my spending for a week (don’t judge me on any of this)
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Conclusions
WANTS- 6 purchases
NEEDS-5 purchases
Basically you may be wondering, how are you even alive, aren’t you buying food? My life is a bit less studenty right now since I have been living with my parents, who I love to death. They have been letting me live rent free and feeding me since January so they have helped me reduce a lot of my costs. Additionally, I’m pretty happy with my almost 50/50 split on wants vs needs, and felt like I was really fair when I determined a want vs need. For the most part, transportation has been my most common need lately, but I have been fortunate enough to get rides to work with my cousin since January, I just take the TTC home. I also managed to take the TTC all the way home from Christie and Bloor on Saturday, saving myself a ton of money in cab fare (would have cost me a good $25 dollars 1 way probably).
Also I’m wondering where my extra TTC tokens went…pretty sure my wallet eats tokens.
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]]>The post Banking: Saving Basics appeared first on Cheap Students.
]]>A savings account is something in addition to a preexisting chequing account that you already hold at your bank. It’s somewhere to put money that won’t be used on a day-to-day basis and allows you to earn a small amount of interest without having to invest yourself.
Yeah the word might sound scary, and even sound like your getting charged for something instead of earning it. In fact interest in a savings account is a good thing, not like those annoying charges on your credit card statement. Usually on a monthly basis interest is given as a percentage of the total value of your savings account, some banks might take the average monthly amount in your savings account instead.
Once you start seeing your interest deposits every month you will being to realize how low interest rates are these days. Huge interest values per month like $1, $2 and maybe one month it might even just reach $7. It’s definitely something to keep in perspective when it comes to how easily we pay for things that cost $10-$20 on a daily basis…see how long it takes to make that money back in interest! Might make you want to spend a little less on those McDonald’s burgers every week..
One of the issues that students may have is actually using their savings account as a chequing account. What I mean by this is a large portion of your savings account shouldn’t be touched on a frequent basis. It’s a place where monthly rent is pulled or that semester’s tuition comes from, but it shouldn’t be an account where daily withdrawals are made from in order to fund your night out downtown or your most recent clothing purchase.
It’s important to control your own bank account and be aware of the different products available at your bank AND what they can do for you. Having a savings account amazingly enough can help you save your money better, simply because it is also money that you don’t have easy instant access to
For more information check out this Government of Canada page on savings accounts. But seriously…my blog post is way more interest anyways.
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