Budgeting
Planning & budgeting
Saving & investing
KiwiSaver
Tackling debt
Protecting wealth
Retirement
Home buying
Life events
Setting goals
Money tracking
Plan your spending with a budget
Getting advice
Studying
Get better with money
What pūtea beliefs do you have?
How to save your money
How to start investing
Find a financial adviser to help you invest
Your investment profile
Compound interest
Net worth
Types of investments
Term deposits
Bonds
Investment funds
Shares
Property investment
How KiwiSaver works and why it's worth joining
How to pick the right KiwiSaver fund
Make the most of KiwiSaver and grow your balance
How KiwiSaver can help you get into your first home
Applying for a KiwiSaver hardship withdrawal
How to use buy now pay later
What you really need to know before you use credit
How to get out of debt quickly
Credit reports
Know your rights
Pros and cons of debt consolidation
Credit cards
Car loans
Personal loans
Hire purchase
Student loans
Getting a fine
What happens if I start to struggle with moni?
How to protect yourself from fraud and being scammed
About insurance
Insurance types
Insuring ourselves
Wills
Enduring powers of attorney
Family trusts
Insuring our homes
Losing a partner
Redundancy
Serious diagnosis
How to cope with the aftermath of fraud
Separation
About NZ Super
This year's NZ Super rates
When you’re thinking of living in a retirement village
How to plan, save and invest for retirement
Manage your money in retirement
Find housing options in retirement
Planning & budgeting
Saving & investing
KiwiSaver
Tackling debt
How to use buy now pay later
What you really need to know before you use credit
How to get out of debt quickly
Credit reports
Know your rights
Pros and cons of debt consolidation
Credit cards
Car loans
Personal loans
Hire purchase
Student loans
Getting a fine
What happens if I start to struggle with moni?
View all
Protecting wealth
Retirement
Home buying
Resources
Videos
Podcasts
Just wondering
Help with the cost of living
In need of financial help
Booklets
Glossary
Blogs
View all
5 October 2015
Reading time: 3 minutes
Posted
by
Tom Hartmann
, 1 Comments
I know someone who has this burning goal to have perfect teeth in old age. It’s a bit unique. She is the only person I have ever met who brushes with a long-term view.
For most of us though, as soon as we could hold a toothbrush, we were taught how to use it and it became the thing to do. We all just get on with it automatically.
Now you wouldn’t typically think of brushing teeth and stashing money as having much to do with each other, but stay with me – they are both (with the exception of my friend, apparently) based on habit.
Just as no one would try to teach a four year old to brush their teeth by explaining to them how grateful they’ll be when they’re 50 or 80, it’s hard to learn to save by thinking about some future far away. Saving just needs to become a habit.
Many of us, thanks to KiwiSaver and other workplace schemes, already have the practice of paying ourselves first. Automatic payments tend to be out of sight, out of mind – we don’t miss the money because we don’t see it. And we can get excellent results this way.
There’s a great overseas example of how, with each pay rise employees received, their savings rates were automatically lifted as well. Before their budgets could expand to the new level of income – what’s known as “lifestyle inflation” – the extra money they were receiving was given a long-term job to do. And it worked like a charm.
So “setting and forgetting” has its upside – it’s great to keep things humming in the background.
But here’s the thing: every once in a while we need to check in and make sure that we’re doing enough. Because much of our lives can be like a submarine on autopilot, at times it’s worth putting up the periscope to see what’s ahead. There’s no point charting a course for somewhere you don’t want to be!
Note the massive difference you can achieve, for instance, by raising your KiwiSaver contributions from 3% to 4%, and especially up to 8%. On a $50,000 per annum salary over 30 years, we’re talking about close to $133,000 more for you!
Run your numbers today with this KiwiSaver account calculator, and check if your planning is on track with Sorted’s retirement planner.
I promise you: this is not as painful as a trip to the dentist.
Use verification code from your authenticator app. How to use authenticator apps.
Code is invalid. Please try again
Don't have an account? Sign up
Or log in with our social media platforms
A Sorted account gives you a personal dashboard where you can save your tools, track your progress and you'll also receive helpful money tips and guidance straight to your inbox.
Or sign up with our social media platforms
Comments (1)
Comments
9 March 19
Harry
Great analogies, totally agree with this.
No one has commented on this page yet.
RSS feed for comments on this page | RSS feed for all comments