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1. Not keeping or maintaining a budget
If you don’t keep a budget, then it can be difficult to manage your money. When you don’t know how much you are spending, or how much you can afford to spend, there’s little incentive to spend wisely. If you have a lot of extra money, or few bills, it might not seem necessary to keep a budget. However, without a budget, it can be easy to overspend, and to forget to save enough. If you don’t get into the regular habit of budgeting regularly, you risk sending yourself into a downward spiral of spending too much, which could cause a large problem later.If you don’t learn how to budget now, you certainly won’t properly manage your money in the future, unless something drastically changes. According to CNN Money, in order to create a budget, you should determine how you are spending now, make goals, and track your spending.
2. Buying everything new
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3. Spending more than you make
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There are many positive effects of spending less. According to The Simple Dollar, when you spend less you have more available to pay down debt, your stress level falls, and you might even be able to take a new job because you will have more financial freedom. Not to mention, you won’t be living paycheck to paycheck, or worse.
4. Not setting money aside for retirement
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5. Not saving for emergencies
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While you can develop better financial behaviors over time, the best time to try to do so is now. If you wait too long to live within your means, or save for the future, you risk continuing to poorly manage your money down the line.
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