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Goodbye Renting

Page 11

by Tracy Lee Harvey


  but unless you have the money to pay cash for it then YOU CAN’T

  AFFORD IT!

  By secondhand (for now) or make do, but don’t get into any debt

  now.

  If you need to buy a car really consider whether you are purchasing

  for your needs or your wants. Flashy doesn’t mean easy and it can cost

  you money you could be putting towards your home.

  If you have bought a car and are paying it off on a personal loan then

  get rid of the debt as quickly as possible. You might think that there isn’t

  any point because you’re still hit with the same interest, but the idea is to

  get you in a home sooner rather than later and the less debt you have to

  start with the better.

  If you’re fortunate enough to be able to pay off a debt and save, then

  consider consolidating your debt into your first home loan. This means

  transferring the personal loan you have into your new mortgage. This

  frees up a large chunk of outgoings each month (that you’re paying with

  your personal loan) and that gives you breathing space when paying off

  the ‘good debt’, i.e., your mortgage.

  Ask yourself:

  What expenditure do I have that I can cut back on or do

  without?

  Do I really need to have both a phone at home and a mobile

  as well?

  Can I cut expenditure by monitoring my electrical usage,

  walking instead of driving, catching public transport, using a

  car pool or buying secondhand?

  Can I stop drinking, smoking or gambling?

  These might seem like obvious unnecessary costs to many, but it is

  surprising the number of people who do not realise their non-essentials

  are a considerable contributor to their poor financial situation.

  And before you dismiss the idea that cutting back on these items will

  indeed help towards owning your own home, I need to remind you that

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  this is exactly how I got started to begin with and the effort and going

  without was such a short time in comparison to my now long-term

  financial security.

  This is the beginning of your road to money management which will

  take you further into getting, maintaining and most importantly, keeping

  your first home.

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  Why it is so important to get

  into your own home then

  build from your investment

  Here are some facts you need to be aware of which will illustrate why

  it is so important to do something about your long-term stability and

  financial situation right now! If you’re someone who believes our

  government will always provide financial support in the form of an aged

  pension or welfare payment, you need to think again!

  The reason government introduced compulsory superannuation in

  1992 was because they desperately needed to reduce the number of

  retirees eligible for a full pension. In essence, the ageing population

  would far out-weight the number of future working people to support

  them. Governments of the day must now work frantically to implement

  changes to our current support system. Our politicians realised, albeit too

  late, there was very little time left to prepare for the overwhelming

  society of retirees and the lack of financial resources needed to

  adequately carry them. This is why where’ having an unrelenting

  execution of changes to welfare.

  I use the term execution for good reason. Welfare is being put to

  death by way of slashing and burying the system as we’ve known it.

  Those changes have come in the form of cutbacks to all welfare sectors

  and will continue to be unlike anything seen by the past two generations.

  What’s more, while the changes are going to be radical, and the

  ramifications for having left the run too late will have a profound impact

  on millions of people (not just welfare recipients), now and in the future.

  Unfortunately, the extremity of this situation doesn’t seem to have

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  filtered out to the public, including the people who will be most affected

  by the changes in the very near future.

  Many continue to live under the illusion that, no matter what, there

  will always be financial support from the government when things get

  tough.

  Wrong!

  What people are failing to recognise is that the support systems we

  take for granted are quickly grinding to a halt. The financial handout is

  no longer a foregone conclusion and very little has been done to prepare

  those people who are generational welfare dependent, marginalised, or

  simply lack the skills to support themselves for the coming change. The

  impact and preparation needed for sustainability hasn’t registered on the

  average working person, either. When times are prosperous, it is often

  assumed that it will remain so for a very long time. But… just because

  times are pretty good right now doesn’t mean that it won’t change.

  Times do change, economies falter and prosperity is always uncertain.

  That’s why it is so important to prepare for your short-term, long-term

  and immediate future.

  Most importantly, the sweeping changes are crucial. The economy

  can no longer sustain the level of welfare support being distributed and

  our governments have no choice but to impose strict adjustments. The

  outcome is grim for people without financial survival techniques in

  place.

  Furthermore, the initiation of compulsory superannuation is telling

  you that the government won’t be looking after you when you retire. The

  superannuation instalments by companies on behalf of employees are

  usually between 7-9%. It is money that is to be invested and reinvested

  until your retirement and also not to be touched until that time arrives. In

  theory it is supposed to ensure you are self-funded and wealthy in your

  older years. But… then why is there an urgency now for people to add

  more and more towards their superannuation? And why can you only

  access the funds when you retire? Why can’t you have some of your

  hard earned savings during your working life when you might need it

  and why are you penalised heavily if you withdraw funds early? It is

  YOUR MONEY after all.

  Why is now such a critical time?2

  For nearly 50 years, many governments of the western world have

  keenly endorsed their commitment to support older people in their

  2. Excerpt from Goodbye Welfare.

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  retirement. Alas, that commitment has reached its use-by date and there

  isn’t a fail-safe measure installed to protect it. In other words, for most

  of the time over the past 40 something years, the economy has been

  buoyant enough to support the number of people retiring at any given

  time. This is because the numbers of people expected to retire are based

  upon the history of those retired in the past. Unfortunately, the numbers

  are increasing rapidly, so fast in fact that the economy just won’t be able

  to support the numbers. This is due to a severe lack of homework by past

  and present governments, which have now realised the impact that our

  ever-increasing number of retirees will have on our economy. What’sr />
  more, the percentage of people who will retire in the next 20 years will

  escalate dramatically, causing great concern as to how our population

  can be sustained financially. There will be fewer working as opposed to

  those needing to be supported. This has occurred as a result of the larger

  than ever ageing population, better known as the baby boomers.

  The baby boomer generation was born after World War II, from

  1946-1964. Following World War II, people became more at ease with

  their future and children were produced readily and in abundance. That

  generation of children is now looking forward to retirement but unless

  they have a healthy superannuation fund or retirement plan they will

  require the aged pension from our already strained systems. In essence,

  governments have failed to respond adequately or in a timely fashion in

  preparing for this critical situation and the dilemma of the ageing

  population has now tip-toed up with dire consequences.

  The ageing population will grow to more than 20 percent by 2030.

  This is compared with 14 percent in 2005 or 4 percent in 1921. (ABS

  Cat 3222). Governments have realised the revenue needed to fund aged

  pensions will not be available for future retirees. There will be many

  more people requiring an aged pension (as shown in the ABS report)

  than ever before, with a proportionately much lower workforce to

  support them. The lack of groundwork that was needed to prepare for

  this event has now created urgency in overhauling welfare policies.

  Governments are now forced to respond to the issues, with radical

  implications. In other words, the restructure will mean that the

  availability of welfare support will no longer be a foregone conclusion.

  Welfare will become increasingly more difficult to get over time and

  those severely disadvantaged will be given welfare support as a

  privilege, not a right. Moreover, strict changes to current expenditure are

  a matter of urgency because people are living longer, health costs will

  continue to escalate and the ratio of workers (and therefore taxpayers)

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  continues to reduce substantially. As a consequence, the economy will

  not be equipped to support the much higher population of retirees.

  The actions taken by governments will ultimately affect each of us

  one way or another, which is why we must work towards ensuring our

  own financial independence without delay. The urgency of the matter

  requires that we start right now! The longer you wait the more difficult it

  will become to establish the foundation.

  If you’re under 30 years of age you have less than 25 years before

  there is an eradication of the current support system. That’s what welfare

  reform is all about. The urgency for implementation radical changes is

  recognised by economists and politicians alike and they know how

  imperative it is to make these changes happen quickly. This means that

  your children and grandchildren will simply not have the propping up of

  financial support that we believed was our right.

  Two million people in Australia currently get an aged

  pension. At the time of writing this book the pension is paid

  at a rate of $269 per week. For those unfortunate people who

  do not have any other income to supplement that income, and

  remember that compulsory superannuation wasn’t

  introduced until 1992, many are forced to live out the rest of

  their lives on the ‘poverty line’. Baby boomer women in

  particular fall into this category as they are the ones who

  usually had broken patterns of employment, reared children

  when it was expected that women stay at home and earned

  relatively low wages compared to men. Research indicates

  that Australian baby boomer women have spent more than a

  third less time in paid employment than male baby boomers.3

  3 Excerpts from Goodbye Welfare, T. Harvey 2006, from the comment for this chapter.

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  Story Time

  How do you think people who have been highfliers one minute, then

  declared bankrupt the next, managed to claw their way back on top?

  It takes a great deal of tenacity, never giving up and always keeping

  the dream.

  What I would like to show you is that it is possible to get into your

  own address and keep it, even when the price of housing seems

  unworkable. In order to get the point across I have opted to use a method

  that has shown to be a valuable tool in learning. I have used it

  throughout the book to illustrated how some challenges can be overcome

  and that method involves telling a story. The stories are based on people

  who have touched my life and who have inspired others.

  One-legged Warren4

  Warren was a healthy, physically active young guy that played ‘A’ grade

  football and represented his school in the men’s athletic finals, but sitting in a

  classroom all day, every day, just wasn’t his thing, so as soon as he was old

  enough to leave school he did.

  His first job was on a construction site, labouring hard as an apprentice

  builder. One particularly hot day, he decided to lie down in the shade during his

  ‘smoko’ break. He dozed lightly, enjoying the rest when someone yelled at the

  top of their lungs to get out of the way! But it was too late, the crane above him

  had snapped, toppling downward until it crashed to the ground. The crane

  narrowly missed several other workmen, but it didn’t missed Warren. He was

  rushed to hospital in a critical condition and was left unconscious for weeks,

  4 Based on a true story.

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  sustaining massive injuries.

  To the surprise of doctors and family members, Warren gradually recovered

  but his left leg suf ered irreparable damage. The leg became gangrenous and

  needed amputating. It was removed just above the knee. Unfortunately, the

  injuries were far worse than first diagnosed and further amputation to the thigh

  was required later on.

  Warren would receive compensation for his lifelong injuries, and did but not

  without a long, tedious, drawn-out process. While he was waiting for his

  payment he was forced to live totally dependent on his parents while undergoing

  numerous treatments and further surgery. He bat led on for several years, with

  the compensation claim constantly being postponed, or held up for one reason

  or another. Eventually, he could wait no longer and decided to accept the first

  of er of $100,000, with no option to go back later for more money. The time was

  1978, and $100,000 was a considerable amount by any standard, but was it

  enough to see him through countless medical bills, a long-term place to live and

  the lack of any potential earnings?

  When he was finally given the compensation money, Warren went straight

  out and bought himself a brand new station wagon, which would accommodate

  the apparatus he now needed and his beloved dog, Rex. He then bought a little

  unit to live in, believing that he was set for life. He knew he would still struggle

  with life’s challenges because of his disability, but the basic comforts of life

  would be taken care of. Or so he thought.

  By
the time Warren was 20 years old, he had undergone many more

  surgeries to combat the constant pain he was experiencing. He also suf ered

  with post traumatic stress, and niggling phantom pains, where the amputated leg

  had once been. Then one day he met a young woman and fell hopelessly in

  love. Shortly after, he got married and became a father, but the nuptials didn’t

  last long and he soon found himself taking more and more medication to

  overcome the constant pain of the accident and the end of his marriage. The

  drugs not only increased in amount but also in potency. He eventually became

  dependent on morphine.

  In the meantime he had been dipping into his compensation money at an

  alarming rate without any consideration as to how he would replenish it. The

  money was kept in a savings account which could be accessed at any time.

  Within three years he couldn’t af ord it and he could no longer pay the body

  corporate fees or rates on his unit. Meanwhile his ex-wife was looking for a

  set lement.

  Warren was about to lose everything.

  So what happened to Warren?

  Warren had a situation that looked potentially bleak. He was about to lose his

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  unit through a forced sale in order to pay out his ex-wife and all the money he

  had left from his compensation claim was now gone.

  Nevertheless, Warren had something that would turn his life around. He had

  a precious daughter he adored. It was during a weekend visitation with his

  daughter that Warren came to realise he had been self-focused about his own

  need and in doing so had inadvertently neglected his little girl’s long-term

  financial future.

  This was the turning point for Warren - he realised that nothing was going to

  change unless he changed.

  That night he scanned the newspapers looking for a job he could physically

  do (the internet hadn’t been invented yet). He spent the day writing up a resume,

  photocopying it and sending of applications for work. The following day he

  washed and ironed his clothes, and had a much needed shave and a haircut (by

  his mother). That night, with the help of a friend he worked hard at cleaning and

  tidying his home, emptying out cupboards and sorting out items he could sell.

  By the time he had finished he was exhausted, but felt bet er than he’d felt in

 

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