Cash flow means spending less than you earn
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One idea I鈥檝e mentioned regularly on The Simple Dollar is that of 鈥渃ash flow.鈥 It鈥檚 an accounting term that refers to the movement of money into or out of a business or project over a specified period of time.
I really like to use the idea of 鈥渃ash flow鈥 to look at the state of a family鈥檚 finances. Over the course of a month or a year, the 鈥渃ash flow鈥 of a household can tell you a lot about how the family is doing financially.
Here鈥檚 an example of what I鈥檓 talking about.
Let鈥檚 say that in December 2013, a family brings home $6,000. During that same month, the family spends $5,500 on their bills and other family expenses, both necessary and otherwise. This leaves the family with a cash flow of +$500.
First of all,聽a positive cash flow is a good thing.聽That means the family is spending less than they鈥檙e bringing in. At least some of their income is sticking around, going into savings or investments or toward debt repayment.
Now, let鈥檚 say that, out of that $5,500 they spend each month, the family spends $2,000 solely on debt repayment. They have a mortgage and a couple of student loans.
As soon as they pay off one of those debts, that amount they鈥檙e spending on debt repayment will go down. The family will have fewer monthly bills and thus their cash flow should theoretically improve. After all, if they already have a cash flow of +$500, paying off a debt with a monthly bill of $200 should improve their cash flow to +$700, right?
That鈥檚 one of the biggest principles of cash flow:聽elimination of monthly bills 鈥 particularly in the form of eliminating debts 鈥 is one of the easiest ways to improve your family鈥檚 cash flow.聽Every monthly bill you can reduce or eliminate will improve your family鈥檚 cash flow.
This is the big reason why I often suggest people pay off their debts before beginning to invest. Paying off debts is the most direct route to a better monthly cash flow for your family.
Why is a bigger monthly cash flow so good, though?聽I look at it as being something of an 鈥渆mergency fund鈥 for life.
Let鈥檚 say you鈥檝e worked hard and reached a point where you鈥檙e actually spending $2,000 less than you bring in each month. You have no mortgage and no other debts. In that situation, imagine a job loss. You likely have some savings but, more importantly, even after the job loss, your monthly bills are low enough that you鈥檙e not going to intensely struggle with them for a while.
Let鈥檚 say you have a really interesting job opportunity sitting out there in front of you, but it pays $1,500 less per month than you鈥檙e making. If you鈥檙e spending everything you bring in 鈥 a cash flow of $0 鈥 taking that job is impossible. If you鈥檝e paid off your debts and you have a cash flow of $1,500 a month, then you can take that job without changing much of anything else about your life.
Cash flow gives you flexibility. It gives you protection against bad things in life. To me, it鈥檚 a wonderful argument in favor of getting rid of every debt you can as fast as you can, because those debt payments strangle your cash flow.
In the end, cash flow really comes back to that one key principle of personal finance:聽spend less than you earn. It鈥檚 just a different way of looking at that idea, one that really shows the value of getting rid of your debts.
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