Have you ever had your blood pressure taken or heard a nurse say something like “100 over 40″ (I don’t actually know if that’s a good blood pressure or not . . . someone with 100/40 blood pressure might be dead for all I know)?
I propose that we begin a Budget Pressure system. This would be a simple and quick way to assess financial health. The basic ideas is that there are two key pieces of financial information that reveal how well a person handles their money.
Here’s the equation:
Consumer Debt / Percentage of your take-home pay you’re saving per month.
Consumer Debt is credit card debt, car loan debt, or rent-to-own stuff debt. Basically, it’s how much money you’ve borrowed to buy things you don’t really need, or things you could get by with a lower-quality product (like a cheaper car).
I searched the web and here is the average American’s Budget Pressure:
$20,000 / 1%
So, the average American is $20,000 in debt and only saves 1% of their monthly take-home pay.
Here’s our Federal Government’s Budget Pressure:
9.6 Trillion / -12.5%
So, our Federal Government is 9.6 Trillion in debt and is spending 12.5% more than it takes in each year (Yearly budget divided by budget deficit: 4 trillion / 600 billion = 0.125 = 12.5%)
Is anyone really surprised by the recession? Granted, I don’t believe it’s appropriate for the government to constantly save money, because it’s not theirs to save it’s mine, but I’d be okay with an emergency fund of some kind.
Here is what I would consider a healthy Budget Pressure
0/10%
Here’s my family budget pressure: 0/5%
What’s yours?