Summary of this article
Indians accumulate wealth with remarkable discipline, yet they are often uncomfortable deciding what that wealth should actually achieve.
The real confidence comes when families know not just how much they have saved, but what that money is meant to achieve.
Money sitting safely in an account offers comfort for today. But money working toward a goal offers freedom for tomorrow.
Delhi-based Rakesh Kumar had Rs 8 lakh in his savings account. It took him seven years of discipline - setting aside Rs 10,000 every month, quietly tucking away bonuses, and leaving festival gifts untouched. To him, that number represented safety.
But when asked what the money was for, he would simply say: “Just for the future. You never know when you’ll need it.”
Kumar represents a quiet pattern seen across millions of Indian households: we are world-class savers, but we are hesitant planners. We accumulate wealth with remarkable discipline, yet we are often uncomfortable deciding what that wealth should actually achieve.
The ‘Comfort Trap’ of Saving
For generations, saving has been our primary safety net. Without a formal social security system, a bank balance or a gold biscuit became a symbol of responsibility. You can see it. You can touch it. You can access it instantly. However, saving is passive. It keeps options open, but delays decisions. Planning, on the other hand, forces us to confront uncomfortable questions:
When exactly do I want to retire?
What will a college degree cost in 15 years?
If a medical emergency hits, will this Rs 8 lakh be enough?
Says Sanjiv Bajaj, joint chairman and managing director, Bajaj Capital: “Saving protects you from uncertainty. Planning prepares you for it. The real confidence comes when families know not just how much they have saved, but what that money is meant to achieve.”
The Invisible Thief: Why ‘Safe’ is Risky
The irony of Kumar’s ‘safe’ Rs 8 lakh is that it is slowly losing value. With inflation often outpacing standard savings rates, the purchasing power of that money shrinks every year. In a decade, that Rs 8 lakh might only buy what Rs 5.50 lakh buys today. By avoiding ‘risky’ investments, savers often fall into the biggest risk of all: outliving their money.
Expanding on this need for a mindset shift, Bajaj says: “Wealth creation and wealth preservation must go hand in hand. It is not enough to just set money aside; you must ensure it grows at a pace that beats inflation. The bridge between ‘having money’ and ‘having enough’ is a well-structured financial plan.”
From Saver to Planner: A 3-Step Roadmap
To move from simply accumulating cash to building a future, every Indian household can follow this simple framework:
1. Define the ‘Buckets’
Instead of one big pool of ‘future money,’ divide your savings into three specific goals:
The Emergency Bucket: 6-12 months of expenses in a liquid account. This is your ‘peace of mind’ fund.
The Milestone Bucket: Money for specific events (weddings, home down-payment) 3-5 years away.
The Freedom Bucket: Long-term wealth (Retirement) that needs to beat inflation through equity or diversified funds.
2. Insure Before You Invest
A single hospital bill can wipe out years of savings. Planning means moving the risk of healthcare and premature death to an insurance company.
Pro Tip: Never count your ‘Emergency Fund’ as your ‘Medical Fund.’ Get a dedicated health cover.
3. Reverse-Engineer the Goal
Don’t ask: "How much can I save?" Ask: "How much will I need?" If a child’s education costs Rs 20 lakh today, it could cost Rs 45 lakh in 12 years. Once you have that number, you can calculate the exact systematic investment plan) needed to get there.
The Bottom Line
India has never had a saving problem. Our discipline is our greatest strength. The opportunity lies in giving that discipline a purpose. Money sitting safely in an account offers comfort for today. But money working towards a goal offers freedom for tomorrow. The bridge between the two is a plan.













