Manish HemrajaniDiwali comes around once a year and so does the bonus associated with it for a large populace in India. This one-time windfall should be used prudently and not frittered away carelessly. Temptations abound as the festive season rolls around. Mouth-watering online-discounts by the likes of Amazon, Flipkart and Snapdeal tempt us to overspend on wants rather than needs. I recommend the following five things one could do with their Diwali bonus in that order.1. Pay off high cost debtCredit card debt is the worst form of debt one can carry with interest rates around 3-4% a month, which translates to a whopping 36-48% per year phew!!! If one has any credit card debt outstanding I would recommend paying off this high cost debt as it can really burn a hole in one’s pocket. Same goes for personal loans. Try and pay off high interest personal loans with your Diwali bonus as this would put you on a much firmer footing financially and mentally. 2. Establish an emergency fund.If you don’t have any credit card or personal loans outstanding pat yourself on the back! You are on the right path to financial freedom. Life is never a smooth ride however, you never know when you would be thrown a curve-ball in baseball terms or a googly in cricket parlance, which derails your best laid plans – loss of job, health issues, an accident these are all events that are not expected or planned for.It is therefore prudent to have at least three months (ideally six months) of essential expenses set aside towards any contingency needs. A Diwali bonus is a good opportunity to stash some cash in an emergency fund. I would not recommend stashing this emergency fund in a savings bank account but rather park it in a liquid fund, which is backed by government bonds hence highly secure and gives you a return of ~8% (as of Oct 2016). 3. Buy adequate term-life and health insuranceThe right amount of health coverage has become a necessity in today’s high cost environment. Healthcare costs have outpaced inflation over the last 10 years and have escalated beyond belief. Between 2004 and 2014, for example, the average medical expenditure per hospitalization for urban patients increased by about 176%. For rural patients, it jumped by a little over 160%. Such spikes in healthcare costs do no favours to India’s massive, uninsured population. Over 85% of Indians in rural areas and 82% of urban residents have no health insurance. It is imperative that one plugs this insurance gap at the earliest as it can bleed away your savings rather quickly. Hence it is imperative to have adequate health insurance coverage and a Diwali bonus is a great opportunity to buy that coverage.
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