Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Why you should save for something fun

- LIZ WESTON

Financial planners tend to have firm ideas about the most important goals: You should save for retirement, pay off debt and build an emergency fund. Buying a pair of $200 sneakers or an ultra-high definition TV is probably not on that list.

But maybe saving for something you really, really want isn’t frivolous. It may be exactly what you need to get your financial life on track.

Researcher­s who have studied the role of savings in financial health say what’s important is the habit of putting aside money and having a plan for that cash. People who have a planned savings habit are four times more likely to be financiall­y healthy than those who don’t, according to a report by the non-profit Center for Financial Services Innovation. That habit is more important than income, age or other demographi­c characteri­stics, the report found.

Saving even small amounts can help people avoid the high cost of being broke. A few hundred bucks saved may help bypass credit card debt, payday lenders, rent-to-own stores and bank overdraft fees. It can help avoid eviction, or losing a job because the car broke down. Even a thin financial cushion can help people become more financiall­y stable.

“That ability to be resilient in the face of ups and downs is a very important component of financial health,” says John Thompson, senior vice-president and head of research consulting at the Center for Financial Services Innovation. “It also helps people avoid highcost financial services when they face a short-term challenge.”

But saving a small amount, only to see it wiped out by an unexpected expense, isn’t satisfying. Saving up to buy something we want, on the other hand, can feel like a real win — and it’s the winning that matters to our brains. Each time we anticipate getting a reward, our brains are treated to a shot of dopamine, the chemical that makes us want to repeat a pleasurabl­e experience.

Recalling our small wins also can help us learn to persist when difficulti­es arise, rather than just giving up, says Michael Thomas Jr., an accredited financial counsellor who advises clients at the University of Georgia’s free Aspire Clinic.

Rememberin­g the times we’ve achieved a money-focused goal helps counteract the “negative automatic thoughts and catastroph­ic thinking” that keeps people from seeing progress, says Thomas, who has studied psychology and is getting his PhD in financial planning and who also co-hosts Nothing Funny About Money, a public radio program in Atlanta.

If people aren’t already in the habit of saving money, their goal doesn’t need to be lofty — and perhaps shouldn’t be. Being told to save $1 million for retirement or three months’ worth of expenses for emergencie­s could cause them to give up in despair.

“When I’m starting from zero, those seem like magical, fantastica­l, unattainab­le sums of money,” Thompson says. “How would you begin is a daunting challenge.”

What may be worse is telling non-savers that they need to put aside money for retirement and emergencie­s and a host of other goals. Researcher­s at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management found people were much more likely to save money when presented with a single goal. When contemplat­ing multiple goals, people considered the trade-offs and put off taking action, the researcher­s found.

Letting people set their own goals also may goose savings habits. WiseBanyan, a digital investing site, found the percentage of customers who set up automatic savings plans increased about 50 per cent after it allowed them to create their own goals, whether retirement, a trip around the world or a new wardrobe, says chief operating officer Vicki Zhou.

“When you personaliz­e it, the way you think about it changes,” Zhou says.

That’s not to say people should save only for the fun stuff and ignore their long-term financial health. But the fun stuff can be a powerful motivator.

“The behaviour of savings is what we’re trying to encourage,” Thompson says. “It’s not that we’re suggesting (saving for emergencie­s and retirement) isn’t important, but before that comes the behaviour.”

That ability to be resilient in the face of ups and downs is a very important component of financial health.

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