Waiting for higher salary to start saving? CA calls out the biggest money lie middle class Indians believe
Many middle-class Indians delay saving, believing higher salaries will naturally lead to financial discipline. However, chartered accountant Nitin Kaushik explains this is a mistake, as lifestyle inflation often consumes increased income. He empha...

CA Nitin Kaushik pointed out that people often believe they will become financially disciplined once they start earning more. However, he argued that habits usually grow faster than intentions. According to him, someone unable to save a small amount from a modest salary is unlikely to suddenly become disciplined after earning significantly more.
He explained that higher salaries often come with upgraded lifestyles instead of stronger financial foundations. Bigger homes lead to bigger EMIs. Additional subscriptions quietly pile up. Dining habits change, travel becomes more expensive, and lifestyle inflation slowly consumes the extra income. As a result, people continue feeling financially stretched despite earning much more than before.
The CA stressed that financial freedom is rarely built through one large jump in income. Instead, it is shaped through small and uncomfortable habits repeated consistently over the years. The amount may begin modestly, but the discipline behind it matters far more in the long run.
According to Kaushik, the challenge is not always low income but delayed action. Many people assume that better earnings will automatically solve financial problems, while ignoring the fact that spending patterns often expand alongside salary hikes.
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