Posts

Chachanomics' Financial Advice Published in Saturday Nation 18/06/22

I Save Sh.500 Net Daily from My Boda Boda Job. Help Me Invest to Acquire Assets Hello, My name is Ben. I am single. I am a boda boda rider based in Migori Town. On average, I save 500 bob a day after my daily expenses. I also earn 6400 bob every month from transporting school children. I use 6000bob to pay chama every month as merry go round, and the chama offers table banking loan 3X your shares. Currently my shares stand at 12000 bob. I am also currently installing a vertical vegetable garden on a 50X50 plot I have leased to help boost my income. And I have a debt of 20,000 bob. Kindly guide me on how to plan and invest the money I make so as to achieve financial stability, assets, and business capital in the next 10 to 20 years. RESPONSE On a positive note, your saving habit (putting aside Sh.500 daily) is admirable and will go along way in helping you achieve your financial goals over time. Equally, the idea of starting an income generating enterprise is progressive and t...

Chachanomics Financial Advice Published on Saturday Nation 04/06/22

  I Earn a Net Pay of Sh.180,000 but I'm Always Broke and Taking Loans I earn a net pay of Sh.180,000 net but I'm always broke. My monthly expenses are as follows: Rent 44,000 Car loan 21,010 which need to repay in 20 months. Travelling 10,000 Electricity 6,000 Household Shopping 20,000 Water 2,000 I also send some upkeep cash for my parents in the village. Problem is; I have never managed to save anything however much I try. Recent, I found myself borrowing mobile loans that currently stands at 20,000. What do I need to do to attain prudent financial management and stop struggling despite earning a decent salary? How do I start saving? How do I redefine my budget? Please help. Chachanomics Financial Advice From the above financial situation, I have observed the following. 1. The breakdown of expenses is incomplete because it totals to Sh.103,010 yet your net pay is Sh.180,000 which means that about Sh.77,000 is unaccounted for. Suppose you spend S...

SOUND PERSONAL FINANCIAL ADVICE ON SATURDAY NATION

Reader's Question Published in Saturday Nation 23 rd April, 2022 "I live in Ngong and work at the Nairobi Central Business District. I earn a monthly salary of Sh. 40,000. I have a family of 3. I want to be saving about Sh. 10,000 monthly. However, I am currently unable to do so as my expenses often outweigh the money I earn. My rent is Sh. 13,000. I use Sh. 6,500 on bus fare. Food takes about Sh. 12,000 at Sh. 400 per day. I use Sh. 2,000 for home entertainment and Sh. 2,500 for power and water. I send home Sh. 3,000 and give my spouse the remaining Sh. 1,000 for personal use. In between, there are times when I hive off cash from my budgets to meet my personal expenses such as weekend entertainment. How can I rearrange my budget so that I start saving Sh. 10,000 every month? My aim is to build up Sh. 1 million for my family’s land or home ownership." Answer to Question of the Month To rearrange your budget in order to achieve your financial goals, the following is...

Sound Financial Advice Published on Saturday Nation on 26th March, 2022

  How to Survive on a Sh. 26,000 Salary as a Newly Employed TSC Teacher "Anthony is a newly employed teacher. He has a new job with the Teachers Service Commission. His starting salary is a basic of Sh. 26,000. This is his first job and his first formal salary. He has been posted in Eldoret. He is single and without a child. He wonders; how should he budget this salary? What amount should go to what budget allocation? What amount should he save? Between a Sh. 500,000 car and a Sh. 500,000 plot of land, which should he aim to acquire within two years? How much should he save for this? Where should he save?" First, congratulations on securing a job as a TSC teacher. Being young perhaps in 20s, employed, single and without a child is a plus in laying a firm foundation for a financially prosperous future. Second, one major challenge you are face as a newly employed youngster is lack of financial literacy skills* such as budgeting, debt management, saving and investing. That...

Reader's Question Published in Saturday Nation 26/02/22

 Help! I Earn Sh.60,000 Monthly but Spend all the Money on Relatives and Girlfriend Hello! My name is Wafula. I graduated recently from KMTC and have a practice license from NCK. I am not formerly employed but been working for sometime on locum basis even before I had completed my education. I make up to Ksh.2000 daily but can’t save any money. I pay Kshs.11,200 house rent, Ksh.1500 DSTV, Ksh.3,000 cousins rent (university student), cousin’s fee Ksh.5,000 monthly (short course at ICS) and her transport and lunch upto Ksh.3000, Ksh.food 6500. My girlfriend moved in recently and so I support her sister who schools nearby with some food and personal effects Ksh.2500 monthly, house wifi Ksh.1,000, miscellaneous upto Ksh.6000. The family thinks I get too much money and so the financial requests keep inflating. I am forced to work day and night so as to meet the costs. I hardly save anything. I am struggling to do farming back at home at our disputed family land. Kindly assist becaus...

Debt Management

  Debt Management: Effective Strategies of Overcoming the Trap and Shame of Debt With the proliferation of digital money lenders and introduction of "easy-to-get" e-loans, many people have fallen victim to bad debts leading to devastating consequences like suicide, separation or divorce, depression, family conflicts, decreased productivity at workplace and collapse of institutions. By the end of 2021, 4.6M Kenyans were listed in CRB (up from 3.2M in 2020 and 2.7 in 2019) save for the presidential directive on delisting those with less than Kshs.1M. This dire situation calls for the need to learn how to overcome the trap and shame of debts Five critical questions to think about 1. What does the term debt refer to? 2. What does it mean to be trapped by debts? 3. How do people become trapped by debts? 4. How can we overcome the trap of debts? 5. What are the dos and don'ts about debts? 1. Demystifying the concept of debts The concept of debts is best captur...