One-third of Australian households have no savings

Au.Ag.Mzch

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http://www.theaustralian.com.au/new...-have-no-savings/story-e6frg6n6-1226579475726

One-third of Australian households have no savings

by: Brittany Stack and Valerina Changarathil
From: Sunday Mail (SA)
February 17, 2013 12:30AM

ONE in three Australian households is living pay cheque to pay cheque and many would not be able to cover a major emergency, a survey into Australia's financial health has revealed.

The BT Australian Financial Health Index, based on a survey of 5000 Australians, found 41 per cent could meet monthly expenses but a third worried about being able to do so.

The BT Index, one of the largest surveys of its kind, also found Australians have become more conservative than ever since the global financial crisis in their attitude towards credit card debt.

The survey, conducted by Ernst & Young, also found:

56 PER CENT of people say they are unable to save as much as they would like to

A THIRD do not believe they will have a financially secure retirement

48 PER CENT of respondents say they rarely or never make contributions to a super plan

ALMOST one in five would not be able to find between $500 and $1000 if they needed it in an emergency

35 PER CENT have developed a sound plan to help them achieve their goals.

BT general manager Deanne Stewart said the index revealed what drove financial success, but it painted a mixed picture of Australians' attitude to money management and planning.

"The results of this survey show very clearly that there are a large number of people struggling to cope financially day to day," Ms Stewart said.

"In many instances, people are living in the hope that they will achieve their goals rather than planning for a fulfilling and secure future.

"This has implications for their health and lifestyle, impacting on their levels of stress, and in the longer term influencing their enjoyment in the years after they finish work."

When it comes to household expenses, the survey revealed families with four or more children have the biggest monthly food bill, but spend less on housing and utilities than smaller families.

A family of four spends on average $1788 a month on housing, compared with a family of six or more, which spends $1367.

The monthly average utilities bill for a family of six or more is $875, compared with $883 for a family with three children. The survey found expenses were more or less standard across states.

Ms Stewart said people often put managing their finances in the "too-hard basket".

"There are simple steps everyone can take and over time these will make a huge difference to people's savings and peace of mind," she said.

"The quite high number of people who shop without purpose for things they don't need is just one example."

THE SAVER

SINGLE mum Suzie Pavlovs, 36, works full-time at the Royal Adelaide Hospital as a registered nurse to meet the basic expenses of her family, made up of her two daughters Lily and Poppy.

Ms Pavlovs, of Mile End, is self-sufficient and targets a saving of at least about $250 a month after expenses.

"I try to stick to a budget," she said. "It's not always possible, but I try.

"Shopping is restricted to special occasions and I cook five to six nights a week."

The BT Australian Financial Health Index shows almost half of Australians with a regular savings plan save $200 or less a month, revealing a country under strain when it comes to saving for the future.

Ms Pavlovs said she was managing fine with her expenses, but only just and mostly because she worked full-time.

"It's hectic but I can afford basic things," Ms Pavlovs said.

Other financial planning strategies she followed included paying off her credit card in full every month and restricting food/supermarket spending to $200 a week.

THE SPENDER

THE BT Australian Financial Health Index found tradespeople spend $844 a month on food and $628 on family expenses such as medical bills, childcare and education.

Professionals dish out $831 a month on food and $594 on family expenses.

Plumber Daniel Morton isn't surprised with the result.

Every three months, he drives to an abattoir and spends $600 to buy 30kg of lamb.

He also spends an average $350 a month on other groceries.

"I see the guys (other tradies) that work with me generally getting a lot of takeaway," he said.

"I am a bit health conscious though, so it's a self-made sandwich, a bottle of water and fruits for me for lunch."

Daniel's average monthly food bill of $350 is a bit lower than the national average spend on food by tradies and also below the state's average monthly food bill of $666 - the lowest in the nation.
 
Only "One-third". That's a lot better than I expected.

My guess is a large portion of the other two thirds have minimal "savings" but are in the red when you count in the liabilities side of the equation (mortgages, credit cards, cars, ...).
 
I've just returned from India, the poverty there is staggering.

I have no sympathy for whinging aussie's whining on how financially hard things are in Australia. In this country jobs are available so my message is stop the rabid consumerism and get a second job if you have too.

Non disabled people on the dole who say "there's no work" and "I can't find a job" need a swift kick up the backside and a reality check.
 
Judging by conversations with friends who have been working full time for at least the last 5 years, I'm also impressed that it wasn't higher. Absolutely nothing to show for their efforts asset wise and if they do have savings, it's so they can buy something like a big plasma TV, branded handbag etc


ALMOST one in five would not be able to find between $500 and $1000 if they needed it in an emergency
now that's a worrying stat :/
 
House said:
Judging by conversations with friends who have been working full time for at least the last 5 years, I'm also impressed that it wasn't higher. Absolutely nothing to show for their efforts asset wise and if they do have savings, it's so they can buy something like a big plasma TV, branded handbag etc


ALMOST one in five would not be able to find between $500 and $1000 if they needed it in an emergency
now that's a worrying stat :/

It's clear there's an epidemic of westerners that have entitlement issues that think they deserve all the latest fashions/gizmos, even if they can't afford it. It's an obvious sign of a mind ravaged by mainstream brainwashing.

It's sad, pathetic and enraging.
 
salty lemon said:
I've just returned from India, the poverty there is staggering.

I have no sympathy for whinging aussie's whining on how financially hard things are in Australia. In this country jobs are available so my message is stop the rabid consumerism and get a second job if you have too.

Non disabled people on the dole who say "there's no work" and "I can't find a job" need a swift kick up the backside and a reality check.

I agree. I just had words with my unemployed neighbor (two doors down). He started to whinge that my animals wake him up at 7:30 every morning. Both him and his wife have been unemployed for the past 10 years. He pulls the "It's making my depression worse" line on me. I felt like flying off the handle at that point, but decided to just walk away. Perhaps if he had some purpose in life, and actually did something more productive than whinging, his depression and self-pity would be more bearable.
 
I was in that one in five at one point for a few years when I was young. Not because I was spending a lot, I wasn't. I was week to week and after paying bills, taxes, mortgage there was virtually nothing left.

And one thing I know is that government appeals to those people. Says it will look after you if you support it even when you look at it objectively it is raping those people in taxes. I never succumbed to the lies and propaganda because I knew exactly who was making my life harder than it needed to be at the time and when I looked at where taxes were going it was easy to see I was getting virtually no value from what I was paying.
 
I do have sympathy for those with mental issues who are out of work, chronic depression, anxiety etc.
 
All SS members who have a stack of 30ozs or more can get their hands on $1000 very quickly..

That is comforting to know that the great majority of stackers have fiat backup.

I don't think that there are too many SS members who don't have 30ozs of silver.

The few that don't, perhaps that are just new to silver stacking! :)

Regards Errol 43
 
Yippe-Ki-Ya said:
It's impossible to save as government steals most of what we earn!

It's not impossible, but with what the government thieves overtly (taxes, fees, charges, fines) and what they steal covertly (inflation) it is next to impossible. The only way to save is to spend less than what you earn and to look to make the money you have saved work for you. Most of us on this forum hope to have our money working for us in the form of PM's, I also believe the effective use of debt is another weapon in the arsenal of the saver, at this stage though I am not in a financial position to effectively use debt as a tool because I am still learning.

On a side not, one of the best things I did was cash in my contributions toward my previous super fund when I went to a SMSF. I have these $$$ now readily available in an account if needed now or in the future and not locked away.
 
Yippe-Ki-Ya said:
It's impossible to save as government steals most of what we earn!

Yes they do steal and things are no doubt much harder than decades ago.

However its still the peoples fault for not making better financial decisions/spending habits.

No point playing the victim, I'd rather take responsibility.
 
An old observation from many years ago.

"the 'average' Australian family is 3 pay days away from starvation".

I agree.


OC
 
mmm....shiney! said:
On a side not, one of the best things I did was cash in my contributions toward my previous super fund when I went to a SMSF. I have these $$$ now readily available in an account if needed now or in the future and not locked away.

What do you mean by this?

Sounds like you're saying that you could readily access funds from your SMSF should you need it??
 
Ernster said:
Yippe-Ki-Ya said:
It's impossible to save as government steals most of what we earn!

Yes they do steal and things are no doubt much harder than decades ago.

However its still the peoples fault for not making better financial decisions/spending habits.

No point playing the victim, I'd rather take responsibility.

ummm - unfortunately those whom the government steals from (the most) are those who actually DO spend less than they earn (or would have earned). In fact they get penalised for being financially prudent.

You'll find that those who throw caution to the wind and dont plan financially are the bludgers who suck on the teat of government, and have my tax money given to them to sponge off. (they as a rule pay next to no tax at all)

The rest of my tax money goes to the salaries of scum sucking beaurocratic parasites, who spend most of their days thinking up ways to steal from me.
 
^ Be fair Yip. They also spend a lot of time dreaming up ways to restrict your freedom (but probably more time in meetings trying to think up performance indicators and trying to prove they met their last KPI's).
 
Au.Ag.Mzch said:
ALMOST one in five would not be able to find between $500 and $1000 if they needed it in an emergency

While I am not surprised that this was said, I dont think they really thought hard enough.

Most of the people who said that probably had a smart phone worth $500 if sold secondhand in their pockets. If they really needed the money then they could find it.
 
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