For seven years, an Edmonton couple we’ll call Tina and Drake have lived by the gospel of their budget.
Neither one can point to exactly why they started laying out a budget or what influenced them to be so guarded with their money, but it has evolved into defining the couple’s way of life. Both Tina, 27, and Drake, 32, describe themselves as minimalists. Neither one of them really sees the point of spending money simply to own more things. As Drake puts it: “We don’t have a need to buy things and stuff we don’t want just to buy things and stuff.”
Combined, Tina and Drake, who both work in business consulting, earn more than $250,000 per year. Their budget is set up to allow them to save at least $10,000 of their monthly after-tax income of $14,442, or what amounts to 70 per cent of their income. There are many millennials who live rent-free at home with their parents that can’t even do that. But then again, most people enjoy buying things and stuff they don’t need just to buy things and stuff.