An
Emergency Fund: Your First Line Of Defense
By David Berky
Downsizing, rightsizing, forced retirement,
layoffs, firings, outsourcing, and being made redundant. All
could mean the same thing to you: financial catastrophe.
No, you may not
have to declare bankruptcy or move back in with your parents,
but losing your job could put a big dent in your financial
goals and even set you back several years. You may need to
live on your savings or liquidate some of your investments.
If you have no
savings or investments you may have to rely on credit cards
and could rack up significant credit card debt. Then when
you find a new job, your expenses may have increased because
of the additional credit card payments.
And the job you
eventually find may not pay as much as the one you lost. So
you are now forced to live on less while your expenses have
either continued at the same level or even gone up.
Studies show that
the average worker will have six career changes in his or
her lifetime. Not just job changes, but career changes. So
how can you prepare for your own financial "downtime"?
An emergency fund.
An emergency fund
is really just savings. But it is not savings for a particular
item or even an investment for your future or your retirement.
It is your "rainy-day" fund. But unlike insurance where once
you pay your premium, the money is out of your hands, your
emergency fund is yours to keep.
So how much do
you need? How can you build your emergency fund? And where
should you keep the money?
The easiest way
to figure out how large your emergency fund should be is to
take your current income and multiply it by the number of
months you could be out of work. If you make $3,000 each month
and you want to be prepared for a 6 month "vacation", you
will need $18,000.
But obviously saving
$18,000 will take some time. How quickly you want to build
your emergency fund depends on how concerned you may be about
your current and future employment prospects.
Saving $100 each
month will take you 180 months or 15 years. Saving more each
month means you will be protected sooner. Also consider that
during the next 15 years your income may increase and your
expenses usually rise to match your income.
Also consider inflation.
(If you own your home, your house payment may not rise. If
you are renting, your rent probably will.) The cost of food,
utilities and taxes also rise over the years. At a 3% inflation
rate after 15 years your $18,000 will only buy $11,400 worth
of goods.
A good rule of
thumb for saving is to try to save enough each year to supply
you with one month's income. This means you are saving 1/12
or 8.3% of your monthly income.
This will allow
you to build your emergency fund by one month every year.
After only six years you will have a six-month supply of emergency
cash. Then you can continue to extend your "coverage-period"
or you can divert the monthly payment into other savings or
investments.
Most people find
that "billing" themselves for savings and investments is a
good way to put your savings on auto-pilot. If an amount is
taken automatically from your bank account each month, it
is easier to handle than if you wait until the end of the
month and try to save from what you have left over. (How often
do you have anything left over?)
So where is the
best place to keep your emergency fund? Probably not a place
where you can have easy access to it - too tempting. Definitely
not as cash in the cookie jar - too unsafe (and no interest).
And probably not in 5 year CDs - too restrictive. You may
want to avoid CDs altogether so that you are not charged an
early withdrawal penalty when you can least afford it.
Savings accounts
are OK, but usually pay very little interest. If a savings
account is your choice, open one at a bank that you don't
regularly use. Also don't get a checking account to avoid
the temptation to spend "just a little" bit here and there.
Or look for a money
market account that pays a reasonable interest rate. You may
want to consider a money market account that only invests
in tax-free securities. This way you won't have to worry about
paying taxes on your interest.
Then set up an
auto-withdrawal from your regular checking account or direct
deposit amount from your pay check right into this new account.
Adjust your budget to accommodate having less money each month
and forget about it.
You can also give
your emergency fund a boost now and then by putting "windfall"
money into to it. You know "free-money"; birthday gifts, inheritances,
insurance settlements, escrow overages, rebates, tax refunds,
etc.
Your emergency
fund becomes your own financial insurance policy. And if you
never use it you will have that much more money to play with
when you retire. Or even retire early with the extra money
you have saved.
David
Berky is president of Simple Joe, Inc. which sells the Simple
Joe's Debt Eraser PC software. Debt Eraser can help anyone
get out of debt quickly and inexpensively by creating a Rapid
Debt Reduction Plan. www.simplejoe.com |