[moneydance] Envelope Budgeting/Category Balances...
Robert Kuropkat
robert at kuropkat.com
Wed Apr 9 15:47:14 EDT 2008
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Graham,
Thanks for your response (and the initial web page). What you say is
about what I expected.
I would like to hear what you derived for the credit card repayment. I
had guessed I could continue to use categories (perhaps switching them
from expense to income or vice versa) so the transfers work right.
I was thinking about your using income categories and was thinking if I
left them as expense categories (at the expense of them reading negative
when I have money to spend as you pointed out) but then thought
**maybe** the reports and graphs would still work. I agree it would be
nice if we could display a category summary on the main page as you suggest.
I'm thinking I'm going to try your idea, but use the categories as
designed. Since I can transfer between categories (even if it is
slightly non-intuitive which way it goes) I may be able to live with the
sign change since my goal is to always make it go to zero anyway. Plus,
I think some of my own confusion stems from not understanding **real**
accounting so if I manage to get my mind around that, it will feel
better. After all increasing an Expense account is increasing your Debt
which IS a negative number. So a negative expense IS cash available.
Hurts to think about I'll grant, it's like making something MUCH smaller :-)
I'll share back my experience and we can compare. For now, I need to go
pay up since I am sure I'm going to stick with it. Intuit has angered
me for the last time so today I switch! (and this coming from someone
who has used Quicken since version 4 for DOS!)
Robert Kuropkat
Graham Borland wrote:
> *This message was transferred with a trial version of CommuniGate(tm) Pro*
> Robert Kuropkat wrote:
>> Just downloaded MoneyDance and looking to crowbar the Envelope Budgeting
>> System into it. I found a discussion on the forums for this with this
>> mention in particular:
>>
>> http://moneydance.com/trac/wiki/Envelope_Budgeting
>>
>> which outlines basically what I had come to work out myself when I saw
>> that Categories have a "balance." My question on the forum and here
>> [apologies for the cross-post] is what breaks by doing this?
>
> I wrote the Wiki page you mentioned, although I haven't really updated
> it since my initial attempt. I have been using the technique very
> successfully, though, and avoiding MD's built-in budget manager completely.
>
> The main problems are:
>
> 1. To get the categories showing with positive balances when they have
> balance available to spend, they have to be Income categories. This is
> unfortunate because then Income/Expense type reports and graphs become
> useless. For me personally, this isn't a big deal; all the information I
> need for my day-to-day budgeting is contained in the category balances
> and transaction history. Some people might find the lack of useul
> reporting and graphing capability a deal-breaker though.
>
> A solution to this would be to add a new category type, which behaves
> like Expense from a graphing/reporting point of view, but like Income
> from a balance-accumulation point of view.
>
> Or, just keep all the categories as Expense categories, as long as you
> don't mind them displaying a *negative* number when you've money
> available, and a *positive* balance when you've overspent. For me, that
> would be too confusing.
>
> 2. Following on from point 1, transferring money between categories is
> tricky. For example, you might want to transfer money from your
> "Emergency fund" category to your "Car maintenance" category to pay for
> some unexpected repairs. To get the money moving in the right direction,
> the amount has to go in the opposite column (in the transaction entry
> field) from the one you'd intuitively expect, i.e. Deposit rather than
> Payment (or vice versa, I can't remember which).
>
> 3. The only way to get an overview of category balances is the Edit
> Categories window (ctrl-shift-C). This is not particularly easy to use
> nor nice to look at. It would be far nicer if categories could be
> displayed on the home page, parallel to the real bank accounts.
>
> Incidentally, I have also found a neat way to manage repayment of
> existing long-term debt. Maybe I'll get around to updating the Wiki page
> sometime soon.
>
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