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Book feedback : Dave Ramsey’s The Total Money Makeover

 


Dave Ramsey changed my life.

In the fall of 2004, I had over $35,000 in consumer debt. I was making a solid middle-class salary, but I lived paycheck-to-paycheck. My money habits were terrible. When I depend into the foreseeable, all I saw were years of toil to pay for the things I’d already buy.

Then a friend credited me a copy of The Total Money Makeover, a book by some guy I’d never heard of named Dave Ramsey. I had nothing to lose — I read the book and then followed his plan. I was amazed to find that I had gotten rid of most of my smaller debts in just six months. Over the next 2-1/2 years, I paid off the big personal debt, too.

Live like no one else
Ramsey’s tool is not easy. It’s not a get rich quick scheme. It requires sacrifice, hard work, and focus. In fact, printed on the bottom of every page of The Total Money Makeover is the book’s motto:

If you will live like no one else, later you can live like no one else.
Ramsey explains: “If you will make the sacrifices now that most people aren’t willing to make, later on you will be able to live as those folks will never be able to live.” The book is peppered with inspirational testimonials from real people who have taken this doctrine to heart, sacrificing the present for the sake of their future. To me, this is fabulous stuff.

At the core of The Total Money rebranding are Ramsey’s seven “baby steps” to financial freedom. By following these in order — and not moving on to the next until the latest step is complete — readers gradually progress from debt to wealth. They get rich slowly. Here’s Ramsey’s plan:

Step one: Save $1,000 cash as a starter an urgent situation fund
Before you do anything else, says Ramsey, you must save a $1,000 emergency fund. This money is to be used only for emergencies: car repairs, health related bills, etc. At first I thought I could skip this step. It only took a couple of setbacks for me to realize the wisdom of setting this money aside. If you have a cash cushion, life’s mishaps won’t force you deeper into debt. You’re able to recover more quickly.

Step two: Start the debt snowball
Once you’ve built some nest egg, it’s time to tackle your debt. You do this with the debt snowball. Here’s how it works:

List your non-mortgage debts from low balance to highest balance.
Pay the minimum payment on all debts with the exception of the one with the smallest balance.
Throw every fractional monetary unit you can find at the smallest debt.
When that debt is gone, do not alter the monthly amount used to pay debts, but pay all you can toward the debt with the next-lowest balance.
This is the most contentious part of Ramsey’s plan. Critics note that it makes more sense to pay off high-interest debt first. Even Ramsey admits that the debt snowball isn’t mathematically optimal. That’s not what it’s about. “The reason we list smallest to most significant is to have some quick wins,” Ramsey writes. It’s about behavior difference over math.
Step three: Finish the emergency fund
Your $1,000 emergency fund was only a start — after you’ve eliminated your non-mortgage debt, it’s time for some serious saving. Ramsey’s advice is fairly classique on this point: accumulate three to six months of living expenses. For most people, that’s $5,000 to $10,000.

The easiest way to do this is to simply take the money you were applying to your debt snowball and convert it into a savings snowball. If you were paying $500 each month toward debt, now throw that money into a high-yield nest egg account.

(This is the step I’m on now. I have a some thousand dollars saved. My goal is to set aside $10,000 by the end of 2008. Because I’ll soon be authorship full-time, I’m actually hoping to save $20,000, but that may be a bit of a stretch.)

Step four: Invest 15% of your income in retirement
While you’re completing the first three steps (especially the first two), Ramsey offers suspending all investment activity, even if you have a 401(k) with an employer match. He saves investing for last, once good habits have been established. It’s true that you’ll give up a few years of compound returns in your retirement accounts, but that’s okay in the long run, he says. By adhering to the first three steps, you will have developed smart money habits and a strong saving ethic, so that it won’t take much effort to catch up.

Now that you’ve paid off your debt and saved for emergencies, Ramsey says to invest 15% of your income into mutual funds. He advocate diversifying evenly among several broad categories of funds. Invest anywhere you have an employer match first, and then put money into a Roth IRA. Put the rest of the 15% wherever it makes the most sense.

Step five: Save for college
Once you’ve begun saving for your retirement life, you can turn your attention toward your children. Ramsey writes, “Saving for college provides that a legacy of debt is not handed down your family tree.” Use an understanding Savings Account or a 529 plan to save for your children’s college teaching.

Ramsey also emphasizes that kids can work their way through college in an effort to minimize the loans they need to take out. My favorite piece of advice, however, is to seek scholarships. One of my best friends is a money aid counselor at a major university. He says that it’s mind-boggling how much scholarship money goes unclaimed every year. The students who know this are able to fund most of their education through college scholarships.

Step six: Pay off your home home finance loan
Once you’ve taken care of everything else, it’s time for a final, giant step. Ramsey advocates prepaying your mortgage. He’s aware of the objections, but he believes it’s a smart step, anyhow. (For more on this subject, see my recent article on prepaying your mortgage.)

Step seven: Build wealth
If you’ve done all these things — eliminated debt, built sudden savings, invested 15% of your income, and paid off your mortgage — you can begin to build some serious wealth, says Ramsey. By implementing the first few baby steps, you’re far ahead of most Americans. But with the final step, you can enjoy the fruits of your labors. Invest. Give. Have fun. If you want to buy a boat and you’ve accomplished the “baby steps”, then buy a boat. Just don’t go into debt to do it.

Minor reservations
Though I agree with most of Ramsey’s philosophy, some of his advice rubs me the amiss way. For example, Ramsey advises readers to avoid debt altogether — no credit cards, even after you’ve paid off your mortgage. I used to rss to this line of thought, but now I recognize that credit cards can be a useful tool, if you have the training to pay them off every month.

Also, Ramsey writes that “separate checking accounts mean one of two things, either ignorance or problems”. This is ludicrous. Couples should buy a method that works for them, whether that’s joint or separate accounts. Don’t believe there’s only one way to manage family finances.

Highly recommended
When I first read the testimonials in The Total Money Makeover, they reminded me of late-night infomercials. “After years of making only $48,000 a year, with hard work we paid off $78,000 of debt in twelve months.” Yeah, right. But now, three years later, I could write one of those testimonials myself. (Heck — this entire review is one big review.)

Ramsey’s advice strikes cynics as simplistic. But his steps work because they are simple, and because they provide tangible results. Your $1,000 emergency fund isn’t just cheap insurance against Real Life; it’s a visible reminder that you have succeeded, that you can save, that you can be smart with money. The debt snowball is built around brisk wins, which give you the confidence to continue.

The total money makeover is not for everyone. If you don’t have a problem with money, there’s nothing here for you. If you have a handle on your personal finances, you’re better off reading The Random Walk Guide to investments [my review] or The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing. But if you’re one of the millions who struggles with debt, who can’t seem to escape living paycheck-to-paycheck, then The Total Money Makeover is a must-read. Your local public library probably has a copy or two. Go borrow it today.

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