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Mental Accounting

What Is Mental Accounting?

Mental accounting is a behavioral bias where people treat money differently depending on its source, purpose, or category—even though all money has the same value.

Why It Matters

Mental accounting can lead to inconsistent financial decisions. People may:

  • overspend “extra” money (like bonuses)
  • save in one area while carrying high-interest debt
  • justify unnecessary purchases
  • separate money into artificial categories

This can reduce overall financial efficiency.

How Mental Accounting Works

People mentally assign money into categories such as:

  • “rent money”
  • “vacation fund”
  • “bonus money”
  • “emergency savings”

While budgeting can be helpful, mental accounting becomes problematic when it leads to irrational decisions.

Example

A person receives a tax refund and spends it freely, even though they have credit card debt with high interest.

Mental Accounting vs Budgeting

  • Mental accounting is often irrational categorization.
  • Budgeting is intentional and structured money management.

FAQs About Mental Accounting

Is mental accounting always bad?
No, it can help with budgeting if used intentionally.

Why do people treat money differently?
Due to emotional and psychological associations.

How can it be improved?
By focusing on overall financial goals.

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