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    Monthly salary of Rs 4.5 lakh but still unhappy: CA explains why many high earners struggle to save money

    Synopsis

    CA Nitin Kaushik highlights lifestyle inflation as a key reason for financial dissatisfaction despite high incomes. As earnings increase, expenses rise, driven by social comparisons and the pressure to maintain a certain lifestyle. He advises capping lifestyle inflation, avoiding debt, and prioritizing financial independence over social validation for true satisfaction.

    high salary low savings
    CA says your salary is not the problem but your spending is
    Lifestyle inflation, according to CA Nitin Kaushik, is one of the main reasons people feel financially dissatisfied despite earning high incomes. As earnings rise, expenses tend to increase in tandem, often outpacing the rate of income growth. This leads to a cycle where people upgrade homes, cars, holidays, wardrobes, and dining experiences without actually improving their financial security. The outward display of success may look impressive, but behind the scenes, savings remain minimal and financial freedom stays out of reach, the chartered accountant said.

    Kaushik highlights the example of an urban professional earning ₹4.5 lakh per month, or RS 54 lakh annually. After paying approximately Rs 12 lakh in taxes, the take-home income stands at about Rs 42 lakh. On paper, this should indicate a comfortable lifestyle. However, real-life expenses tell a different story. Giving a breakdown of the urban professional's expenses, the CA said, annual rent and household costs can reach Rs 18 lakh, children’s school fees another RS 6 lakh, and groceries, fuel, and domestic help around Rs 4.5 lakh.

    Low savings

    Dining out, events, and celebrations consume Rs 3 lakh, while travel within India and abroad can take up ₹4–5 lakh. Insurance premiums and maintenance expenses add another Rs 3 lakh. This brings total annual expenditure to roughly Rs 39–40 lakh, leaving only Rs 2–3 lakh in savings — hardly enough for long-term wealth creation.




    The issue, CA Kaushik explains, isn’t the size of the income but the constant comparison to others and the pressure to match their lifestyles. Social media intensifies this problem, with peers flaunting international vacations, luxury homes worth crores, and designer wardrobes. This fuels a cycle of spending to “keep up,” leaving individuals burdened with EMIs and little breathing room in their finances.

    Lifestyle inflation

    True satisfaction, according to Kaushik, comes not from earning more but from reducing unnecessary comparisons, gaining control over one’s time, and ensuring personal progress beyond material consumption. It requires clarity about life goals — choosing financial independence over social validation, freedom over debt, and purpose over possessions.



    "The real trap: Lifestyle inflation. The moment income rises, so do the expenses. From Uber to driver, from Goa to Greece.
    The hunger to “upgrade” never ends. And now we call it standard living instead of luxury," he said in a series of tweets.

    Kaushik stresses that the modern consumer culture pushes the false idea that the next purchase will bring happiness. In reality, peace and stability come from intentional choices, not constant upgrades. The solution lies in capping lifestyle inflation, avoiding liabilities that tie up future income, focusing on wealth-building rather than lifestyle upgrades, and redefining success to prioritise calm over luxury. Ultimately, he says, the real achievement is having money without feeling the need to prove it, living life on one’s own terms instead of chasing filtered versions of reality online.
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