Re: Budgeting in Money 2004--More Confusion! by dragonwing
dragonwing
Tue Sep 26 07:31:01 CDT 2006
This is very helpful. Accounting 101 (or anything remotely similar) has
never been a part of my life, so I've found trying to grasp it now a bit
baffling. I think I understand what I was getting wrong: The budget planner
tells me how much of my budgeted money I've spent and if I've spent more than
I budgeted, NOT how much of my real money I've spent and if I've spent more
than I've got. Now I think I have to go study the Cash Flow reporting part
of the program and see if I can figure it out. Thanks again for your help!
"William R Wood" wrote:
> Yes, this budget stuff is confusing until you accept accounting logic which
> has been tested and proven over a very long time.
>
> Using your example of $2000 monthly income and stashing $100 per/mo in a
> cookie jar leaving you $1900 to spend:
>
> Your budget will show $2000 per/mo income and lets say $1900 per/mo expense,
> leaving $100 excess funds. Your cash flow report will show the monthly
> transfer of $100 to savings so all the income is accounted for. So the
> budget planner does not know where the $100 per/mo goes and it doesn't care
> because that $100 is not an expense - that money has not been spent and it
> still belongs to you.
>
> You said it correctly in your first post. The whole picture cannot be seen
> in the budget report. But you will know exactly how much excess money you
> have per/mo from the budget report, thus you will know whether you are
> "within budget". If your bottom line is a minimum of $100 excess funds
> per/mo then a quick glance at the budget planner will tell you if you are on
> track.
>
> This stuff is easy to grasp if you will accept the fact that a budget is an
> analysis of income and expense - nothing more.
>
> Now - understand that you can force Money to include your cookie jar type
> money in the budget by arbitrarily treating the savings as an expense.
> Create a category called Savings and categorize your $100 per/mo withdrawals
> from checking as Savings. Your budget reports will now reflect this
> "expense". But your actual account situation will be somewhat messed up.
> If you do keep the money in a jar under the bed this works fine. But if you
> put the savings in a bank account you cannot transfer the money from
> checking to savings in Money. [By the way a transfer is not a category -
> only income and expense goes in a category. A transfer is a transfer,
> period.] You can, of course, put the cookie jar money in a real bank
> account and track that account in Money but you won't be able to use
> transfers (since you are categorizing the transfers improperly as expense)
> so Money will not see the source of the funds in the savings acct. Frankly,
> there is nothing illegal or immoral about this approach and many folks
> handle savings this way. In fact I thought that new versions of Money were
> setup to accommodate this very thing.
>
> Personally I prefer the standard Accounting 101 method of handling savings
> and other transfers and I pay very close attention to our monthly budget and
> cash flow reports. Money really does an outstanding job in this area and I
> depend on it every day.
>
> Regards
>
> Bill Wood
>
>
>
> "dragonwing" <dragonwing@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:EBEA3016-7981-4EA1-9A44-F6D2FA4B59A6@microsoft.com...
> > Wait: Now I'm confused again. Let's say I have a policy of withdrawing
> > $50 a
> > month to put in a jar for savings. True, that's money I've transferred,
> > not
> > money I've spent. But suppose, too, that my budget is down to the bone,
> > every
> > penny of my checking account accounted for. If the budget doesn't know
> > that
> > every month I withdraw that $50, then where will I find that $50 to
> > withdraw?
> > I'm not sure I'm explaining this question clearly. I hope I am.
> >
> > Again: my budget thinks I have a certain amount of income to work with,
> > from
> > which all my expenses are subtracted. I've been transferring a fixed
> > amount
> > of money each month to an "imaginary" savings account which I set up in
> > Money. That's so I can see if I can stay within a budget that doesn't
> > include that extra money--to help me see if I can save reguarly. Where
> > does
> > that idea fit into the budgeting part of the program? If I deposit $2000
> > a
> > month in income, and take out, say, $100 a month to "not spend," then I'm
> > working on $1900 a month of income--but how would the budget planner know
> > this? So how can I know I'm actually "within budget" when the planner
> > tells
> > me I am?
> >
> > I hope I'm making sense--or at least that my confusion is making
> > sense!--so
> > that someone can help me out with understanding this.
> >
> > Thank you!
> >
> > "William R Wood" wrote:
> >
> >> You cannot include the college savings as part of your budget without
> >> mangling the logic of basic accounting. Trust me, you don't want the
> >> savings in your budget - it simply does not belong there.
> >>
> >> Saving money is not income or expense! It is simply transferring money
> >> from
> >> one account to another. A budget is a tool to track income and expense,
> >> therefore, it cannot and should not track savings!
> >>
> >> Keep doing exactly what you are already doing - transfer money from your
> >> checking acct to college savings acct. And definitely use Bills and
> >> Deposits to automate the monthly transfer. What you are already doing is
> >> exactly correct.
> >>
> >> And you are already tracking your monthly college savings beautifully -
> >> just
> >> look in your cash flow report to see the monthly transfers coming up in
> >> the
> >> future. You will see the precise effect that those transfers will have
> >> on
> >> your cash positions. Don't know where the Cash Flow report is or what
> >> its
> >> called in your version of Money. In M2002, which I use, it is in
> >> Accounts&Bills>Cash Flow Review. Note that you must set the Cash Flow
> >> report up properly to see what you want. Take some time to do this
> >> correctly. You will find the cash flow report to be invaluable.
> >>
> >> Then look in your net worth statement, account balance report and/or your
> >> college savings account itself and watch your savings grow.
> >>
> >> Keep up the good work. Sounds like you have good financial discipline -
> >> a
> >> very good thing.
> >>
> >> Regards
> >>
> >> Bill Wood
> >>
> >>
> >> "dragonwing" <dragonwing@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> >> news:1E3B55B5-087D-4BB1-9D9F-0DC75B6D6F47@microsoft.com...
> >> >I understand about credit cards, but I'm confused about savings. Every
> >> >month
> >> > I transfer a certain amount out of my checking account into a college
> >> > savings
> >> > account; both accounts are in my Money program. Money does this
> >> > automatically for me, which is what I want it to do. However, it seems
> >> > that
> >> > in order to have this automated through my Bills & Deposits list, it
> >> > has
> >> > to
> >> > be categorized as a transfer, which means that it doesn't show up as a
> >> > budget
> >> > expense. I understand that as a transfer from one account owned by me
> >> > to
> >> > another, this isn't exactly an expense--but in terms of budgeting, it
> >> > is
> >> > something I need and want to keep track of. How can I include this
> >> > college
> >> > savings as part of my budget?
> >> >
> >> > Thanks!
> >> >
> >>
> >>
> >>
>
>
>