Jessica Irvine - Money with Jess

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Learn how to get money, how to spend it and how to save it.  Does thinking about money make you feel overwhelmed, confused or anxious? That ends now. Join one of Australia’s most loved and respected economics journalists, Jessica Irvine, as she helps you strip away your negative money thoughts and teaches you the real meaning of money: how to get it, how to spend it and how to save it. 
Whether you want to buy a home, retire comfortably, sleep well at night, leave a job you hate or borrow to build your wealth, learning to budget your money is the foundation of all good money decisions. 
Money with Jess Over 300 genius hacks to help you boost your income, trim your spending and create the life you truly want. Effective strategies for coming to grips with your own spending habits A colorful system for personal finance that will keep you engaged and interested Money doesn’t have to be intimidating. With
you can forget the fear and learn to make money decisions with confidence.

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First published in 2022 by John Wiley Sons Australia Ltd 42 McDougall St - фото 1

First published in 2022 by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd

42 McDougall St, Milton Qld 4064

Office also in Melbourne

© Jessica Irvine 2022

The moral rights of the author have been asserted.

ISBN: 978‐0‐730‐39823‐3

All rights reserved Except as permitted under the Australian Copyright Act - фото 2

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the Australian Copyright Act 1968 (for example, a fair dealing for the purposes of study, research, criticism or review), no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, communicated or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written permission. All inquiries should be made to the publisher at the address above.

Cover design by Wiley

Author photos: © Louie Douvis

Cover background image: © silverpak/Shutterstock

Title hand lettering image: © very‐very/Shutterstock

Lightbulb image: © Dashk/stock.adobe.comArrow image and notebook image: © Anatoliy Babiy/iStock Highlighter image: © OpenClipart‐Vectors from Pixabay.

Disclaimer

The material in this publication is of the nature of general comment only, and does not represent professional advice. It is not intended to provide specific guidance for particular circumstances and it should not be relied on as the basis for any decision to take action or not take action on any matter which it covers. Readers should obtain professional advice where appropriate, before making any such decision. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the author and publisher disclaim all responsibility and liability to any person, arising directly or indirectly from any person taking or not taking action based on the information in this publication.

How to get immediate help

If you are in financial distress, call the National Debt Helpline on 1800 007 007 on weekdays between 9.30 am and 4.30 pm (Australia only).

An army of trained financial counsellors is standing by to help you negotiate with creditors (people you owe money to) and to help get you back on financial track.

It's a completely free, independent and confidential service funded by the government and delivered by not‐for‐profit organisations in your state.

You can also access a ‘live chat’ feature on their website: ndh.org.au.

How to access my free resources

Throughout this book, I refer to many worksheets I have created to help you get started on your budgeting journey. All the resources I refer to are available to download for free from my website: jessicairvine.com.au.

Check it out and get downloading today!

For Henry xx

Introduction

Hello friends!

My name is Jess and I'm good at money. Like, really good.

It's taken a long time for me to be able to say that with confidence — partly because it wasn't always true.

Shortly after I divorced in my mid‐30s, a colleague suggested I write a book titled A Man Is Not a Financial Plan about how to manage your finances as a single parent. Trouble was, I didn't know how.

Which is a bit embarrassing, really, given I've now been working as a high‐profile economics and finance journalist for some of Australia's most prestigious newspapers for the better part of two decades.

I have a university degree in economics and philosophy. It's my job to regularly pass judgement on how the nation's treasurer is managing the country's budget. I've reported on 18 annual federal budgets so far (not counting the ‘bonus’ emergency budgets and stimulus packages during the Global Financial Crisis and COVID‐19).

I've interviewed prime ministers on live TV, enjoyed private one‐on‐one lunches with Reserve Bank governors and I regularly text and speak with treasury secretaries, both past and present.

‘I've been to budgeting nerd paradise' — as the 1970s chanteuse Charlene once famously (almost) sang — but I'd never, until quite recently, taken a very serious look at my own personal finances.

It's not that I was ever particularly bad at money, depending on your definition of this. I've never had a credit card I couldn't pay off in full each month to avoid paying interest. And I've always paid my bills on time.

But, wow, have I spent a lot of money during my 40 years on this earth!

As my career blossomed in my late 20s and early 30s, I thought nothing of dropping $400 on a new designer suit jacket, a meal at a posh restaurant or a night at a fancy hotel.

I remember spending about that much to have my childhood copy of The Lord of the Rings rebound in an expensive, fabric‐clad hard cover by a specialist antique book store.

Pretty cool, right?

But then, one day, you find yourself pushing 40 as a divorced single mum who doesn't own a home, has never invested in shares or property and has no idea if she's on course for a comfortable retirement.

I'm the classic example of someone who knows a lot about something in theory, but was pretty crap at applying it in practice.

Looking back, I can see that at the time of my colleague's book‐writing suggestion, I was still drowning in deep shame and sadness at the failure of my marriage and my single parenthood.

But, as the dust began to settle on my new life, I did start to slowly pick myself up and put my financial life together — perhaps for the first time.

I bought my first home as a single mum aged 38 (I share all my best hacks for navigating that gruelling process in chapter 6— stay tuned!).

At about that time, I began writing a weekly personal finance column for the ‘Money’ sections of the Sunday Age and Sun Herald newspapers. In it, I finally began applying all the economic theory I had learned to overhauling my real‐life finances — and sharing all the gory details with readers.

My Instagram account, @moneywithjess, began to grow rapidly and I pitched the idea of a weekly email newsletter of the same name — Money with Jess — to share the results of my one‐woman mission to budget, save and invest.

You name a crazy money‐saving experiment, I've tried it!

I once kept a spreadsheet to calculate the precise cost of every meal I cooked for one week to figure out a realistic food budget (it worked out about $85 per week for me and my son). I used another spreadsheet to tally the cost of buying the same basket of groceries from two different supermarkets to find out which was cheaper (spoiler alert: Aldi).

I kept a handwritten tally on a sticky note stuck to a bottle of dishwashing powder to figure out the per‐wash cost and whether it is cheaper than using tablets (it is, mostly because you can just use less detergent).

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