But this should be part of your budget in the first place. I know I will receive X amount of income in a month and Y amount in expenses, from there a prudent person plans what to do with the rest which might include savings and debt repayment, which should not result in a massive surplus or deficit every month...if that happens than this person clearly does not know how to budget.
Of course. But a government doesn't make X amount every month now do they? Budgeting based on that one month could very well put them well out by the end of the year, depending on how that one month goes. Do you want a National Budget every month to evaluate the fiscal fundamentals of our economy? That's not a huge waste of time or anything...
A deficit is not acceptable at all. I don't know where you get that idea. Having even a small deficit means we're really further in the hole because we're now paying interest on money we didn't have to begin with. Having a huge surplus is infinitely better than even a small deficit. That money gets spent on things we need, or returned through rebates, or any number of worthwhile projects. In short it adds value. Interest payments do not.Occasionally, some unexpected extra cash comes in, other times an unexpected expense pops up, both might cause an unexpected surplus or deficit in your budget, but these are one time things, and not consistently happening.
The reason for this is because governments did not properly fund things in the first place and ran large surpluses which they used for one time spending on projects which were popular at the time.
And some times a a period of fiscal hardship must be endured to come out with better fundamentals. It's unfortunate, but a necessary evil when one gets used to living beyond their means, ie deficit.
There are many examples. But that fits the uses of a surplus as well. Only the Government at the time didn't think it a high priority, obviously.Our military is a perfect example, while the government ran huge multi-billion dollar surpluses, our soldiers were stuck using old, outdated and sometimes dangerous equipment.
There's a middle ground you're missing. There's no reason you can't do both. I don't know any financial advisors that would advise against having a rainy day account. I'm pretty sure they all will say that's a good idea.As mentioned, debt repayment should be part of a good budget to begin with and it is generally considered better to pay off debt rather than set up savings accounts as you are likely to save more money on interest by focusing on the debt than you would get investing.
Paying off the debt is already the single largest expense the Canadian Government has. It's due to years of successive Government's being able to live with things like a $500 million deficit at year's end, instead of giving themselves a larger cushion within which they could operate, and obviously spending what we didn't have to begin with.Well of course it is a winning formula because debt repayment is already part of the budget. If you pay off $15 billion in debt and then have to borrow $500 million to fund a small deficit, but have managed to put $10 billion in tax cuts back into the economy, everybody wins even if partisans at year end decry the $500 million deficit while ignoring the fact we are $14.5 billion better off than we were last year and more money was kept in the economy.
As debt payment is already part of the budget, there's nothing wrong with accounting for how much you're going to pay off, and then using up what's left at the end of the year. It's like topping up an RRSP when there is spare cash.
I was talking about spending to the point of break even, and that not being a winning formula. Maybe next time if you don't break a paragraph into separate quotes you won't miss the point. Just a thought.My family doesn't get income from taxes, we work for it...how did you get your deal