A year of saving builds something real. Here is how to measure it and use the learning for the year ahead.
The Annual Accounting
The annual savings review is a specific practice: comparing this year’s starting and ending financial position to understand what the year’s savings and financial decisions produced. The number that matters most is not how much was saved — it is how much the overall financial position improved. Did total assets increase? Did total liabilities decrease? Did net worth grow? These questions tell the real story of the year’s financial progress.
Measuring the Year’s Progress
- Emergency fund: balance December 31 vs. January 1
- Total savings and investments: balance December 31 vs. January 1
- Total debt: balance December 31 vs. January 1 (lower is better)
- Net worth: total assets minus total liabilities, year-over-year
- Savings rate: total annual savings ÷ total annual income
Setting the Next Year’s Roadmap
With the year’s data reviewed and the learning captured, the next year’s savings roadmap can be set with realistic targets grounded in what actually happened rather than what was hoped. Goals based on realistic savings capacity rather than optimistic projections. Adjustments that address the specific patterns that caused shortfalls this year. The annual review’s output — the honest accounting plus the realistic next-year plan — is the compounding mechanism for savings improvement over time.
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