August 28, 2013 by Usiere Uko Leave a Comment
The author of ‘Practical Steps to Financial Freedom and Independence,’ Usiere Uko, writes that earning more may not be the solution to financial difficulties
There is one question on the lips of
most employees towards the end of the month, from the civil service up
to banks, telecoms, multinational companies and anywhere employees are
found – “Has the salary entered our account?” This has been upgraded to
“have you received the alert.” The similarity does not end there. All
workers have another thing in common – the salary is not enough. It has
never been enough, it is not enough now and chances are it will never be
enough. Generations of workers come and go but the quest remains the
same.
Climbing the salary ladder
When I joined the job market in the
early nineties, my monthly salary was in the three figures bracket. I
had to save up for months to buy my first mattress. Over the years, for
many workers, this has grown to six and seven figures and for a few at
the top, eight figures. Wherever you happen to fall in the digits
spectrum, we all seem to have something in common – it is not enough. We
want more. Someone joked that the moment the label ‘salary’ is placed
on any amount of money, it automatically becomes insufficient. It takes
on a mysterious quality of vanishing without trace before the next pay
day.
Many employees have the habit of
spending more than they earn, perpetually owing irrespective of series
of pay increases. Bank officers swoop on ‘high net worth’ employees like
predators, offering mouth watering loans with no collateral except
domiciliation of salaries with the bank, so that they can make
deductions from source. For many, by the time the bank is done, a six to
seven figures monthly salary shrinks to four to five figures after
deductions. Some banks are merciful – they peg maximum deductions to a
percentage of net pay, typically 50 per cent. Others don’t care a hoot.
They can pocket everything if it comes to that. Even for those that
don’t owe, their take home salary hardly takes them home. It abandons
them three quarters of the way home, somewhere around 20th of each
month. Someone has labelled it twenty-hungry. For some, pay day is not a
happy day. Most of the money has been spent before it was earned,
another reminder that more money is needed.
More money is not the answer
Many have come to the conclusion that
more money is the answer, that if they can get a salary increase or a
better job, their financial struggles will be over. History has proved
over and over again that more money is not the answer. As a matter of
fact, more money can become a problem. We all have a comfort zone when
it comes to handling money. There is a way we habitually handle money
whenever it comes into our hands. It is habitual. It happens without
thinking. This is known as money reflex. For most, when extra money
comes into their hands, the reflex is to spend. They have a wish list
somewhere in their head and the moment extra money shows up, they go
shopping. We always find our way to our financial comfort zone. That is
why a saver will always save no matter how low the pay while a spender
will always spend and give excuses why they cannot save.
Most people increase spending when
income goes up. Expenses always grow to catch up or exceed income
depending on their financial comfort zone. This is known as Murphy’s law
of expenditure. Enough seems like a goal on wheels – the more you draw
closer, the more it moves back like a mirage in the desert. The
proverbial ends stubbornly refuse to meet. With this system of spending,
more money generates more expenses, and for one that spends above his
income, more money translates to more debt.
Gate of paradise
When I started my career in the early
nineties, my monthly salary was less than six hundred naira. I had some
classmates from the university working in oil companies then who were
paying about N25,000 monthly in taxes. That was almost four times my
annual salary. I was simply blown away. It seemed out of this world to
me. I was not bold enough to ask what their salary was, if taxes alone
were almost 50 times my salary. To those of us standing on the outside
looking in, they had finally made it to El Dorado. I truly believed
these guys were at the gates of paradise. All their troubles were over
and all their prayers had been answered. Life could not get any better
than that. There was no way they could have money problems. When they
complained about their huge tax bills, I felt they were being
insensitive. If they hated paying so much in taxes, I was more than
willing to trade places with them!
I made it my life dream to work for an
oil company. I left the steel industry and gradually made my way to the
oil industry. I finally made it to paradise. However, I was shocked at
what I saw. I did not see any difference with where I came from apart
from the outward affluence. Folks were more broke than where I came
from. The chorus at month end was still the same. Salary here was same
as salary elsewhere – not enough and everyone wanted more.
He that is faithful in little
If you cannot manage your current
income, you will not be able to manage more income. More money simply
magnifies our money habits and amplifies the results. If you habitually
save and invest, more money will translate to more savings and
investment. If you consume all you earn (eating with ten fingers), more
money will generate more expenses with nothing to show except outside
affluence without a solid asset base. If you spend more than you earn,
more money means more debts.
It is a question of mindset, how you
relate to money. If you do not change, you will keep producing the same
result. If you do not convert your current income to assets (which put
money in your pocket), money will continue to come in one way and depart
many ways never to return. You will forever chase the mirage hoping
ends will meet someday.
No comments:
Post a Comment