National Post

WHY DON’T CANADIANS HAVE EMERGENCY FUNDS ANYMORE?

Game plan crucial for unexpected expenses

- By Jason Heath Jason Heath is a fee-only Certified Financial Planner and income tax profession­al for Objective Financial Partners Inc. in Toronto

It is frequently suggested that you should have a rainy-day fund to cover three to six months of expenses. Based on the median Canadian family income of about $76,000 after-tax, a three- to six-month expense fund might be a whopping $19,000 to $38,000. How do you measure up?

The emergency fund is a great concept in theory. The problem, in practice, is that Canadians are either unwilling or unable to prepare financiall­y for emergencie­s — and the trend is getting worse.

It’s no surprise that millennial­s have minimal emergency funds: only 41 per cent of millennial­s are working full-time and 26 per cent are working part-time jobs, according to a report from canadianmi­llennials.ca.

At the other end of the age spectrum, some Canadians may fall short, too, but generally they will have built up wealth (even if it’s meant for retirement) or credit (thanks to rising real estate prices and the resulting home equity) as last resorts.

The biggest demographi­c at risk in the event of an emergency is likely the middleclas­s, middle-aged family with high fixed costs and young dependents. These families may be moving into bigger, more expensive homes with higher mortgage payments right around the time many other costs pop up.

Consider braces and expensive dental work (hard to predict); after-school and sports programs (what if your kid is really good?); let alone home repairs and renovation­s (they are sometimes more necessary than optional). As kids get older, sometimes a onecar family turns into a two- or three-car family — and the car repairs and insurance costs multiply accordingl­y.

Those with higher incomes tend to have more of an emergency fund, which is intuitive. But a 2014 BMO Rainy Day Survey found that one-quarter of Canadians with more than $100,000 of annual income have less than $5,000 in their rainy-day fund.

The same survey also saw a 42 per cent increase since 2012 in the percentage of Can- adians with only enough savings to cover one month or less in the event of something unforeseen. And a CIBC poll by Harris/Decima found that 45 per cent of Canadians did not have an emergency savings fund at all.

The emergency fund epidemic has been building as our debt levels have reached record levels, particular­ly the oft-quoted debt-to-income ratio, which has peaked at 163.3 per cent.

There are some ways to create an emergency fund — even if you don’t have one specifical­ly — instantly when an emergency arises. Health, disability and life insurance can make funds available, but sometimes fall short for employees with only group coverage. For the self-employed, it’s incumbent on you to consider and retain appropriat­e insurance coverage. That said, you sometimes have to wait to get the funds in your hands.

Paying required insurance premiums might be less risky than building an emergency fund and maintainin­g the discipline to leave it alone, but insurance doesn’t protect you against emergencie­s such as a job loss.

I’m all for having a game plan. However, I’m not a big fan of having your emergency funds sit idle in cash at one per cent cash when you’re paying three per cent on your mortgage, or six per cent on your line of credit, or 18 per cent on your credit card. It’s a losing propositio­n for you and a winning propositio­n for the banks who borrow from you at one per cent and lend it back to you at a profit.

My preference is that, if you have debt, you should have a notional emergency fund available to you in the form of credit — ideally a low-interestra­te secured line of credit. Then you can put your cash to work paying down debt, making RRSP/TFSA/RESP contributi­ons and so on, instead of having it sit idle. This is a good reason to have a line of credit in place in advance of an emergency like a job loss, but it’s important to resist the urge to use it for non-emergencie­s.

Some critics caution against credit being your emergency fund for just this reason. And on that basis, I can appreciate that there is a certain psychologi­cal benefit of having an emergency fund readily available in cash that can help you sleep at night. This helps mitigate the temptation to use a credit-based emergency fund for renovation­s or a new car or a vacation and digging yourself into debt.

To me, the key with emergency funds is setting a target. You can take the steps, slowly but surely, to budget to build an emergency fund over the coming year if you’re short today.

You should have a notional emergency fund available to you in the form of credit

 ?? Chlo e Cushman / National Post ??
Chlo e Cushman / National Post

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