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Use Your Tax Refund To Build Your Wealth With the end of another RRSP season, tax season is just around the corner; T4s, T3s and RRSP receipts are filing in. Now, you need to ask yourself, “What’s the best thing to do with tax refunds?”
Principles of cash flow The answer lies in something called the principles of cash flow. Unfortunately, for most of us, our incoming cash flow is limited, usually in the form of a regular paycheque. What we must do is ensure our outflow (otherwise known as expenses) like taxes, mortgage payments, utilities, car payments, gas, food, entertainment, etc., does not exceed our inflow. This sounds basic, but budgeting is one of the basic elements of financial planning.
Three types of expenditures
No-value expenditures - For some expenses, once your cash is used the money is gone. Things like food, utilities, clothes, entertainment, etc. These expenditures do not contribute to building wealth. This category includes necessary expenditures (like food) but sometimes also far too many unnecessary expenditures (like entertainment). Filling your cash flow with too many unnecessary things is often fun — but not productive.
Depreciable expenditures - In this category, the item you purchase may have value, but that value depreciates over time. The most common depreciable expenditure is a car. Most of us consider a car an asset because it has value, but every year, the car we own has less and less value. Cars depreciate, and often faster than we would like them to. Obviously, a depreciable asset is better for wealth building than a no-value expenditure because it at least contributes to our net worth.
Appreciable expenditures - Using your money in this category is the most productive for wealth building. Assets like GICs, real estate, stock portfolios and bonds, go up in value over time. Using your cash flow for these types of investments will be the most fruitful use of your money. Often, they are not as fun or exciting as spending money on that new big-screen TV or fancy car, but it is the best for improving your financial picture.
Look at your bottom line
Once you know your net worth, the rest is simple. You must either increase the things you own or decrease the things you owe. Obviously, in building the things you own, you will be far better off owning appreciable assets because they work for you. Depreciable assets work against you, and no-value items should not show up on your net worth statement.
Back to the question
You may think all of this is really simple and full of common sense. If that’s the case, then why don’t more people do it? It’s not easy to do. Financial planning is all about trade-offs and discipline. The people who succeed are the ones who just do it!
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