Delaying Saving Does Not Pay

We need to encourage our youth to start early in preparing for life

Kids working

by Dr. Glenn Mollette

Delay is not always the best plan but you can’t do everything today.

You can delay paying your utility bills a few days but you can’t delay for very long because the utility company will turn off your power or water.

You can delay mowing your grass for a few days but eventually the grass will become unmanageable if you wait too long.

You can postpone going to the doctor for a while. If you wait too long your minor problems may become major problems.

Some things in life have to be done today while some can wait a few days. We can’t do everything today. Often there are expenditures we would perhaps like to make but can’t afford at the present moment. So, we have to save our money and wait until we have the money, Too often people can’t wait and buy now to pay later. There may be some purchases like this we can justify such as a house or a car. We have to have some place to live and transportation to work. How much you can afford to spend on monthly payments for housing and transportation depends on your income. Try not to overdo it because even reasonable amounts of money are not fun to pay back, especially with interest attached.

Delay depends on how much time we have. A 21-year-old feels like life is forever while a 70-year-old knows time is fleeting. If you are graduating from high school, all of life is before you. If you are past 65, then you better move a little faster doing what you want or need to do.

Of course, nothing is for certain. A young adult has no guarantees and some old people just keep getting older. We never know for sure but we do know our chances diminish greatly with age. The body wears out.

Eighteen-year-olds should try really hard to earn some money and put $2,000 or $3,000 a year into a Roth IRA account. Let’s say you are 18 and can rake up $3,000 in 12 months time to invest in a Roth IRA and never touch it until you are 68 you will have about $184,000. For the last 50 years, the stock market has averaged about 10 percent annual growth. If you invested $3000 a year at age 18 and 19 you would have about $632,000. Do you know how many Americans have this much money? Only 3.5% of Americans or around 12 million people have $500,000 or more in retirement savings. Only around 1% have $600,000 or more.

Granted, $600,000 won’t buy near as much in 50 years but it will buy something. The point is, delaying investing into a Roth IRA or any 401k is very, very costly. Many 18-year-olds do the exact opposite. They go out and go head over heels in debt. They borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars to obtain an English or Psychology degree from a pricey college that they never use. Saving money becomes a bone crushing impossibility for years and years. Sometimes many never are able to save any. The end result, old age is not good. A 65-year-old couple once said, “We’ve got to figure out a retirement.” Sadly, they had never saved a penny. Today they are both on Medicaid living in a nursing home.

Mow yards, dig ditches, work at a department store or whatever it takes. Spend some time early in your life saving a few dollars. The end result will be amazing but delay does not pay.