Free yourself from the tyranny of toxic budget culture, and build an ethical, stress-free financial life. Track every dollar you spend. Check your account balances once a week. Always pay off your credit card bill in full. Make a budget--and stick to it. These are just a few of the edicts you'll find in virtually every personal finance book. But this kind of rigid, one-size-fits-all advice--usually written for and by wealthy white men (and a few women) with little perspective on the money struggles that many people face--is unrealistic, and only creates stress and shame.
As a financial journalist and educator, Dana Miranda is on a mission to liberate readers from budget culture: the damaging set of beliefs around money that rely on restriction, shame, and greed--much like diet culture does for food and bodies. In this long-overdue alternative to traditional budgeting advice, Miranda offers a new approach that makes money easy for everyone, regardless of the numbers in their bank account.
Full of counterintuitive advice--like how to use debt to support your life goals, how to plan for retirement without a 401K, and how to take advantage of resources that exist to support those left behind by the forces of capitalism--
You Don't Need a Budget will empower readers to get money off their mind and live the lives they want.
Author: Dana MirandaPublisher: Little, Brown Spark
Published: 12/24/2024
Pages: 336
Binding Type: Hardcover
Size: 8.50h x 5.75w x 1.01d
ISBN13: 9780316568937
ISBN10: 0316568937
BISAC Categories:-
Business & Economics |
Personal Finance | Retirement Planning-
Education |
Finance-
Business & Economics |
Finance | Wealth ManagementAbout the Author
Dana Miranda is a Certified Educator in Personal Finance(R) (CEPF(R)) and a personal finance journalist. After leaving a leadership position with a popular financial media startup and spending two years as a freelance writer, she created Healthy Rich to change the way we talk about money. Dana has shared her expertise as a contributor to Forbes, Business Insider, the New York Times, CNBC, NextAdvisor, Culture Study, The Motley Fool, Money magazine, The Penny Hoarder, and Inc. magazine; and Healthy Rich has been featured in publications including Bankrate, Real Simple, and Forbes, where it was named a safe resource for LGBTQ+ financial education in 2022.