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TejasT
07-25-2011, 08:54 AM
You can take responsibility for your own financial future. It's the safest thing you can do to for yourself and your family, especially in these crazy times. Our government is not going to recover the economy. It's up to us, the people. This is how we do it.

Here’s an expanded list of the Dave Ramsey‘s steps to financial freedom (or “baby steps” as he calls them). I found these on his forum:

Pre-Baby Step (Before You Begin):
Do these before you begin the actual program.

- Commit to NEVER borrowing money EVER again for ANYTHING other than a home.
- Take with your spouse and get him/her on the same page as you concerning finances.
- Do a written budget (every month -- because every month is different).
- Temporarily stop all retirement contributions (I know, this is hard, but do it. Read his book to understand why. It’s not forever).
- Get current on all your bills (you MUST have shelter, food, utilities, and basic clothing)
- Get health insurance NOW (changes of getting sick with major medical bills are larger than that of death). - This is especially important if you have children.
- Get life insurance NOW if you have considerable debt and your family couldn’t make it financially if you died. This is especially important if you have children. Social Security (Dave calls it “Social Insecurity”) provides only a small amount of coverage if you have dependents. Get Term Life Insurance only (not Whole Life).
- Amputate your “toys” (bikes, boats, ATV’s, etc) if they will keep you from completing Step 2 within 12 months.
- Cut your lifestyle (cut cellphone, regular phone, Internet, eating out) and/or take a second job if $1,000 - Emergency Fund will take more than 30 – 90 days to fund.

Baby Step 1: Save $1000 in a starter emergency fund
This is the first official Baby Step. Dave Ramsey states that most families can come up with this amount in around a month. Save only the $1000 for now (or $500 if your annual household income is under $20,000), then move onto Baby Step 2. The $1000 starter emergency fund (EF) should take care of the most common unexpected expenses like car repairs that would normally send you back into credit card use when you are trying to pay down your debts.

From Daveramsey.com:

An emergency fund is for those unexpected events that are not regularly planned for happening in life – you lose your job, there’s an unexpected pregnancy, the car’s transmission goes out, or, or, or. Something like this WILL happen. Money magazine says that 78% of us will have a major negative event happen in any given 10-year period of time. So get a rainy-day fund, an umbrella.

This beginning emergency fund will keep life’s little Murphies from turning into new debt while you work off the old debt. If a real emergency happens, you can handle it with your emergency fund.

It’s also the perfect time to get in the great habit of budgeting. John Maxwell says, “A budget is telling your money where to go, instead of wondering where it went.” You don’t have to start a household budget with a perfect month. Start where you are. Write down what you have today. Income and expenses. From then on, spend all your income on paper with purpose before the month begins.

No more borrowing! It’s time to break the cycle of debt!

Expanded Baby Step 1 Actions:
- Chop up your credit cards (CC’s). You have an EF now, no NEED to keep those CC’s !!
- Amputate cars that you can’t pay off within 24 months (You have an EF to fix the “bondo buggy” if something should happen.)
- Consider raising insurance deductibles to $500 or $1000 and dropping full coverage on paid-for “bondo buggy” (You have an EF ya know!)

Baby Step 2: Pay off debt using Debt Snowball
Pay off all debt except for the house using Debt Snowball

From Daveramsey.com:

The math seems to lean more toward paying the highest interest debts first, but what I have learned is that personal finance is 20% head knowledge and 80% behavior. The principle is to stop everything except minimum payments and focus on one thing at a time. Otherwise, nothing gets accomplished because all your effort is diluted.

You need some quick wins in order to stay pumped enough to get out of debt completely. When you start knocking off the easier debts, you will start to see results and you will start to win in debt reduction.

So list your debts in order with the smallest payoff or balance first (excluding the house). Do not be concerned with interest rates or terms unless two debts have similar payoffs, then list the higher interest rate debt first.

Expanded Baby Step 2 Actions:
Start car replacement fund (do not PURCHASE car until step 3 is done or old car dies)

Baby Step 3: 3 to 6 months of expenses in savings
Once you’ve paid off all of your debt except for the house, it’s time to pad that $1000 starter emergency fund up to a full three to six months of basic living expenses so you will be truly ready for the bigger emergencies that may crop up: job loss, extended illness or injury, etc.

Having a fully-funded EF will also allow you to reduce the cost of certain types of insurance (esp. car and medical) by increasing your deductibles.

From Daveramsey.com:

Congrats! Now that you’ve completed the first two Baby Steps, you have momentum! But wait… don’t start throwing all your “extra” money into investments quite yet.

It’s time to build up your full emergency fund.

Ask yourself, “Self, what would it take for you to live for 3 to 6 months if you lost your income?” Your answer to that question is how much you should save.

An emergency is something you had no way of knowing it was coming, something that has a major impact on you and your family if you don’t cover it. A great place to keep this money is in a money market account.

Remember, this stash of money is NOT an investment; it is insurance you’re paying to yourself, a buffer between you and life.

Expanded Baby Step 3 Actions:
- Start furniture or other non-essential stuff replacement fund
- Move up in car if you still feel the need to (must pay cash for it)

Baby Step 4: Invest 15% of household income into Roth IRAs and pre-tax retirement
From Daveramsey.com:

If you’ve reached this step, you have no payments (but the house) and have saved 3 to 6 months of your living expenses.

It’s finally time to get serious about building wealth.

I don’t suggest investing more than 15% because the extra money will help you complete the next two steps – college savings and paying off your home early.

Well, why not less than 15%? Some people want to invest less or none so they can get a child through school or pay off the home super-fast. I hate to tell you, but the kids’ degrees won’t feed you at retirement, and if you throw all your money into your house, you’ll end up having to sell it to eat and buy the book 72 Ways to Prepare Alpo and Love It. Bad plan.

Expanded Baby Step 4 Actions:
- Take your first vacation since finding Dave if you can pay cash for it. (No using the EF !!!)
- Save up 20% for home purchase OR pay down existing mortgage to the point you can drop PMI.

Baby Step 5: College funding for children
From Daveramsey.com:

Whether you are saving to go college or you’re saving for your child to go, the important principle is to start NOW! You should have already started Baby Step 4 – investing 15% of your income – before saving for college.

In order to have enough money saved for college, you must aim at something. Your assignment is to determine how much per month you should be saving at 12% interest in order to have enough for college. If you save at 12% and inflation is at 4%, then you are moving ahead of inflation at a net of 8% per year!

NEVER save for college using:

Insurance
Savings bonds (only 5-6% growth)
Zero-coupon bonds. (only 6-8% growth)
Pre-paid college tuition (only 7% inflation rate)
The best ways to save for college are with Education Savings Account (ESAs) and 529 plans.

Remember, college IS possible without loans!

Baby Step 6: Pay off your house early
From Daveramsey.com:

Can you imagine what life would be like if you had absolutely no payments – not even a house payment?!

You’re not too far from making that a reality! You’ve come this far in the Baby Steps; now it’s time to throw all that “extra” money into the largest investment you’ve probably ever made: real estate.

As you attack this last debt, you will gain momentum much like you did back in Baby Step 2 with the Debt Snowball. Remember, having ABSOLUTELY NO PAYMENTS is totally within your reach!

Remember:

When selling a home, think like a retailer.
When buying a home, think like an investor.
Never get more than a 15-year fixed mortgage.
Don’t tie up more than 25% of your income in house payments.

Baby Step 7: Build wealth and GIVE!
From Daveramsey.com:

You can’t shake hands with a clenched fist. – Golda Meir

HOORAY! You are now debt free, house and all! Doesn’t it feel… weird?

“What am I going to do now that all this money isn’t tied up in debt and house payments?” you may be asking yourself.

Build wealth and give like never before. Continue to work toward leaving an inheritance for generations to come. Bless others now with your excess. It’s really the only way to live!

Vow to never have a fistful of dollars held so tightly that those precious dollars never get away. Some people think if they clutch those dollars tightly enough, never giving, they are on the path to wealth. The real world teaches that the opposite is true.

Just try it. Let me know if it doesn’t work.

jan
07-26-2011, 02:27 AM
Tejas,

great summary of DR's plan. We're on babystep 3, going slowly but steady.
On the budget thing, I just want to mention that this thing really works. Do a monthly budget, pay as much in cash as you can, and all of the sudden you find yourself with money left over at the end of the month, instead of month left over at the end of the money :) Great feeling!

Jan

Greg Newton
07-26-2011, 07:56 AM
Tejas and Jan,

Ya'll keep this discussion going. This is every bit as important in this day and time as physical health.

Greg

TejasT
07-26-2011, 07:57 AM
Jan,

That's awesome that you're on Baby Step 3. We are sooooo ready to get there. You all are definitely doing the right things. What a great way to start your upcoming marriage to Nele.

My wife and I through our ten years of marriage have never been debt free (almost there now, though). I wish we had learned about Dave Ramsey and his program earlier. But I guess it's never too late to teach an old dog new tricks.

Keep up the great work!

TejasT
07-26-2011, 08:03 AM
To anyone reading this . . . here are some budget forms you can use each month to get you started:

http://www.daveramsey.com/tools/budget-forms/

I also want to say, while the steps are easy in theory (if you can do basic math, you can do these), the actual process is hard. It's very much like getting back into shape after a long period of inactivity. Personally, I feel like getting yourself into shape both physically and financially at the same time will change your life. They really compliment each other.

For some reason, those two areas (maybe because they're foundations of modern living) will also improve your family and marital fitness, and your spiritual fitness. I'm not quite sure why, but it's true.

Let's do this. It's time to make this world a better place. That starts with ourselves, our families, and our communities.

TejasT
07-27-2011, 07:30 AM
Here is Dave Ramsey's book if you're interested. It's called The Total Money Makeover. Most library's have a copy of this as well.

http://www.amazon.com/Total-Money-Makeover-Financial-Fitness/dp/159555078X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1311773390&sr=1-1

jan
07-29-2011, 05:22 AM
I would also like to remind you all that well-being and security are the cornerstone of Pavlov's pyramid. Those things come first when the going gets tuff, and that includes financial security as well. No way you are going to develop yourself physically, mentally and spiritually if you have to worry how to make ends meet at the end of the month.
Tejas (and for all those interested of course :) ), here's a link (got John's approval to post it) to a forum I am member of, called Living Like No One Else:

www.livinglikenooneelse.com

It's a forum around Dave Ramsey's Babysteps, and a great motivator, full of inspirational stories about people like you and me, who went down in the gutter, picked themselves up and are on their way (or even are) to financial freedom. You have to register though before you can enter the forum, but don't let that hold you back from doing just that. I'm sure you won't regret it :)

Cheers,

Jan

TejasT
07-29-2011, 05:44 AM
Thanks Jan. I just joined up. Motivation from a group always helps me -- especially when the tough gets going.