Why Personal Finance is Personal

illusion-queen-money.jpgThe reason they call it personal finance is because there aren’t any right answers. That’s right, no right answers. If there were right answers, we could call it something like personal financial decision science. Everyone would be doing the same 20 step program and trying to achieve similar goals.

That isn’t how it works. It is our money. We are all different. We all have our own quirks, goals, personalities, and dreams. Personal finance can not escape that fact that it has to deal with humans, and that is where the personal side of equation comes into play.

Consider two families who just went through their house and de-cluttered. They are both left with a pile of junk, but they decide to do something different with that stuff. One family sells the items through eBay and Craigslist, while the other donates the items to the local children’s shelter. Did either family make a wrong decision? No, they both chose according to their own goals, desires, and values. One was willing to sacrifice income while the other willingly sacrificed the benefits of altruism. One of the tricks to learn to be aware of what our decisions are really costing us.

Sure, maybe the family who sold the stuff will have more money, but that isn’t the goal of personal finance, is it? If it were, we could move closer to a finance science since we have an empirical goal by which to judge all actions. The fact is our money goals are very personal and cover a broad range of topics.

Does that mean some choices aren’t better than others? Of course not. It is still possible to judge the value or helpfulness of a given choice, but it is hard to do without having some understanding of the personal and situational context within which the decision was made.

Ok, so why do I mention this? I honestly feel that we will only cause ourselves trouble without truly understanding the realm in which personal finance decisions are made. In order to make the best decisions and help others make wise decisions, we must be honest about imperfect nature of personal finance. We must be willing to judge actions by not only outside empirical evidence, but also how the decision relates to our goals, personality, and values.

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