The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Ten money insights distilled over 25 years

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The importance of money has less to do with affording the newest iPhone or measuring career success, and far more to do with the core of being human: freedom, ego, stress and relationsh­ips.

How we use and think about money — not just accumulati­ng lots of it — literally can determine our happiness during the roughly 30,000 days many of us are privileged to be alive.

Those are a few of the bigpicture insights I learned in 25 years of writing about money.

In 1995, some of the last millennial­s were being born, a jury said O.J. Simpson was not guilty and “Toy Story” played in theaters.

It’s also the year I became business news editor at a daily newspaper in Pennsylvan­ia, where I started editing guest columns written by local financial planners and stock brokers. I quickly became fascinated with the baffling world of personal finance.

How could I graduate from college — with a business degree, no less — and still not know the basics of how money works for real people in the real world? Saving, investing, taxes, credit and insurance — it’s almost like personal finance was confusing on purpose. Sometimes, it is.

I had the privilege as a financial journalist to figure out some of it by interviewi­ng smart people about money for the next 25 years — through the dot-com bubble of 2001, the housing bubble of 2008 and the pandemic of 2020.

Here are 10 things I learned.

If the COVID-19 pandemic taught us anything, it’s that bad stuff happens, no matter who you are. A rainyday fund is fundamenta­l to keep us financiall­y safer in case of an unexpected large expense, job loss or even globe-ravaging viruses. Start with $500 squirreled away and aim to build it to three to six months of living expenses. Breadwinne­rs die, people get sick and cars crash. You also need the right insurance to keep you from financial ruin.

Advertisin­g existed 25 years ago, but not on a computer in your pocket that you look at 100 times a day. And not with ads targeting you as an individual. Temptation

to buy has never been greater thanks to the evolution of technology and social media.

The antidote to the poison of constant marketing is having a reason to say no to temptation­s. You do that by establishi­ng financial goals. That doesn’t just mean the faroff “saving for retirement.” It could mean saving for a trip to the Bahamas. You know, when people get back to traveling to the Bahamas.

To help set goals, review your calendar and bank statements. Where you spend your time and money is who you are. Time and money are what you change to become who you want to be.

There, I said it. But if you’re not going to create a household budget, at least regularly examine your past spending and categorize it. Financial websites and apps can help. Money leaks will be obvious, as will ideas for intentiona­l spending.

You can’t out-earn dumb spending and you can’t nickel-anddime your way to prosperity. When it comes to money management, you have income and outgo. The rest is just details. On the other hand, it really helps to know some details.

Most people cannot get ahead solely by trading their time for money at a job. Instead, your money needs to make its own money. You can’t do that with minuscule bank interest anymore, so it means investing.

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