Toronto Star

You got a raise — now don’t blow it

While your income goes up, try to keep your spending down

- LEAH GOLOB

In early April, Kelsey Cruz did what many are doing at this time of low unemployme­nt and high demand for talent, she left a job she loved for another that promised her new challenges and a higher salary.

In her new role, the 26-year-old Torontonia­n has managed to get a $40,000 a year pay bump, but Cruz still worries about overspendi­ng as her lifestyle potentiall­y creeps up with her salary, especially with inflation running so hot.

“I feel like a lot of my friends and people I hang out with are in a similar place in life. All do well for themselves so sometimes there’s a feeling of trying to keep up with them, and it can get expensive,” she said.

Cindy Marques, co-founder and CEO of MakeCents, a financial coaching company for millennial­s, said she often sees lifestyle creep — a phenomenon where discretion­ary spending on non-essential items seems to increase alongside someone’s pay — with clients that are caught up in a paycheque-topaychequ­e cycle. Even after getting a raise or new job with higher pay, they remain stuck living paycheque-to-paycheque.

“Unknowingl­y, they just slowly end up adjusting their spending accord to the money that’s available to them. They end up using it all without really advancing their financial situation,” Marques said.

Llifestyle creep can also happen with self-employed individual­s with sporadic income, said Marques. Whether they’re having a good month or a tight month, any extra earnings still end up getting spent.

Cruz said she has seen her spending creep up already. Since the new job, she’s been spending those extra earnings on daily Starbucks runs, going out more to bars and restaurant­s, and grabbing Uber rides without hesitation. “There are so many monthly expenses that are so unnecessar­y, but since I’ve been making more money, I’ve justified to myself that it is OK because I can afford to.”

Combatting lifestyle creep boils down to tracking your expenses, Marques said. Most problems happen when you’re not aware of how money is moving in and out of your account.

“Subconscio­usly we just end up adjusting our own spending based on what we see is available in our chequing account,” Marques said.

Instead, those receiving a raise should create a plan for the extra money they’re going to earn. If it isn’t tied up with meeting the costs of inflation, Marques recommends Canadians set up automatic savings contributi­ons to use some or all of those additional funds to increase their net worth.

Marques said she does this with her own income so that “future Cindy” can benefit from her savings, which she calls her freedom fund.

For those wondering if they should use the extra cash to upgrade their lifestyle, Marques said take it case by case.

For instance, if you’ve been dreaming about renting a bigger apartment throughout the pandemic but it always felt financiall­y out of reach, a raise would be a good time to consider allocating more money toward a move.

However, if you’re sporadical­ly thinking about things you can buy that you didn’t necessaril­y need before, it’s better to resist the temptation than it is to immediatel­y made a purchase, she said.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Instead of adjusting your spending to your boosted income, create a plan to save that extra money for your future, one expert suggests.
SPENCER PLATT GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Instead of adjusting your spending to your boosted income, create a plan to save that extra money for your future, one expert suggests.

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