dearJulius.com

How to Make Your Money Biases Work for You


The way our brains work can cost us a lot of money. But some of our mental quirks can be turned to our advantage.

Sometimes, our brains are wired in ways that can hurt us financially — but there are ways to turn these quirks to our advantage.

By Liz Weston, NerdWallet

Cognitive biases are the faulty ways of thinking that can persuade us to run up debt, save too little and make stupid investment decisions. The bandwagon effect, for example, entices us to buy the hot stock everyone’s talking about, rather than the mutual fund that makes more sense for our long-term goals. Or we sign up for a too-large mortgage because of optimism bias (“I’ll figure out a way to make the payments, somehow!”).

We can try to be more rational, but sometimes it makes sense to exploit our faulty wiring instead. Here are three money biases that you could put to work for yourself:


Mental accounting

Money is fungible, which means every dollar has the same value regardless of how we get it or store it. But our brains didn’t get that memo, so we treat different types of money differently. We’re tempted to splurge with windfalls, for example, or to be more careful spending cash than using credit.

You can turn this mental accounting to good use by creating multiple savings accounts, each labeled with your goal for the money. For example, you could create accounts called “vacation,” “car repair fund,” “home down payment” and so on. Online banks and credit unions typically make this easy by allowing you to create and name numerous subaccounts without minimum balance requirements or fees.

Labeling and segregating money could help you keep your hands off of it. While you might dip into a general savings account for a questionable purchase, you may resist the urge if you can envision having less money for your vacation or not being able to pay for a needed car repair.


‘End-of-history’ illusion

Think of the person you were a decade ago — what you thought was important, what you liked and disliked, how you behaved. If you’re like most people, you’ve changed, but you also probably think that the person you are today is pretty much who you’ll be from now on.

Regardless of their age, adults consistently underestimate how much they’ll change in the future, according to research by psychologists Jordi Quoidbach, Daniel T. Gilbert and Timothy D. Wilson, who dubbed this phenomenon the “end of history illusion.”

This illusion leads to the tattoo, mortgage or marriage you later regret. But the end-of-history illusion could be beneficial if you use it to give your future self more, rather than fewer, options.

Here’s an example: People who save for retirement often anticipate the freedom and leisure they’ll enjoy one day when they can quit work. They can’t imagine they’ll feel differently later. As they get closer to retirement, though, some realize they want to keep working at least part time for the extra money, the intellectual stimulation, the social benefits.

With sufficient savings, you typically have more options: You could quit, work part time, work full time, take a break and return to work or start your own business. If you haven’t saved, you may have little choice but to keep working.


Hyperbolic discounting

Our hard-wired preference for short-term payoffs, even when we would get more by waiting, is known as “hyperbolic discounting.” We know we need to save more for retirement, or pay down debt, or build an emergency fund. In the moment, though, we want to spend our money in other ways.

But hyperbolic discounting can be leveraged to create good outcomes, as well. Behavioral economists Richard H. Thaler and Shlomo Benartzi designed a “Save More Tomorrow” intervention where people committed to saving a portion of future raises. The economists figured opportunities to save future income would be considered more attractive than giving up current income. They were right: Retirement plan participation and contribution rates rose at the companies that tried this approach.

Saving future income is also the idea behind automatic escalation. Many 401(k) plans allow you to sign up now to increase your contribution in the future by, say, 1 percentage point a year, and some plans have automatic escalation as the default. The IRS also offers a kind of “save more tomorrow” plan: You can split the direct deposit of your next tax refund, sending part to your savings account and the rest to checking.

It would be great if we were always rational and could count on ourselves to make smart decisions. Since we aren’t and we can’t, using these workarounds can help us get better results with our money.

This article was written by NerdWallet and was originally published by The Associated Press.

|Featured Content_$type=three$c=3$l=0$m=0$s=hide$rm=0


A Part of Julius LLC
Made with in NYC by Julius Choudhury
Name

Banking,13,Bills to Pay,41,Bitcoin,2,Companies,7,Credit Card,11,Cryptocurrency,1,Debt,2,Emergency Fund,1,Entrepreneurship,1,Featured,47,Features,19,Home Improvement,12,Insurance,18,Investing,42,Marketing,1,Markets,23,Money,7,Mortgage,3,Office Improvement,1,Personal Finance,312,Personal Loan,2,Real Estate,165,Retirement,36,Save Money,23,Saving and Investing,9,Saving and Spending,16,Savings,5,Small Business,284,Startup,12,Student Loan,2,Taxes,56,Tips and Tricks,2,Top Stocks,2,Warehouse Improvement,1,
ltr
item
Money and Finance | Investment Advice, Budget Plan, and Tax Hacks: How to Make Your Money Biases Work for You
How to Make Your Money Biases Work for You
The way our brains work can cost us a lot of money.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgChuSJVzYNPsu90JQjjKAPRLSct8MrF0Am6WWUb53L20-DK1ImNTpnjD6IQIHOe6lM2TocCEk1piwczCSZuUI8wfsuHcMNkbCyreZu2gbsjD7XSw-mMWwrYJxbVAKkVnXgSXm5Gw0Ert_T/s1600/How+to+Make+Your+Money+Biases+Work+for+You.jpg
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgChuSJVzYNPsu90JQjjKAPRLSct8MrF0Am6WWUb53L20-DK1ImNTpnjD6IQIHOe6lM2TocCEk1piwczCSZuUI8wfsuHcMNkbCyreZu2gbsjD7XSw-mMWwrYJxbVAKkVnXgSXm5Gw0Ert_T/s72-c/How+to+Make+Your+Money+Biases+Work+for+You.jpg
Money and Finance | Investment Advice, Budget Plan, and Tax Hacks
https://finance.dearjulius.com/2019/12/how-to-make-your-money-biases-work-for-you.html
https://finance.dearjulius.com/
https://finance.dearjulius.com/
https://finance.dearjulius.com/2019/12/how-to-make-your-money-biases-work-for-you.html
true
2765933497744639011
UTF-8
Loaded All Posts Not found any posts VIEW ALL Read More Reply Cancel reply Delete By Home PAGES POSTS View All RECOMMENDED FOR YOU LABEL ARCHIVE SEARCH ALL POSTS Not found any post match with your request Back Home Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat January February March April May June July August September October November December Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec just now 1 minute ago $$1$$ minutes ago 1 hour ago $$1$$ hours ago Yesterday $$1$$ days ago $$1$$ weeks ago more than 5 weeks ago Followers Follow THIS PREMIUM CONTENT IS LOCKED STEP 1: Share to a social network STEP 2: Click the link on your social network Copy All Code Select All Code All codes were copied to your clipboard Can not copy the codes / texts, please press [CTRL]+[C] (or CMD+C with Mac) to copy Table of Content