Sabado, Pebrero 7, 2015
Miyerkules, Enero 7, 2015
Three Reasons Why You Should Put Forward Your Retirement Instead of Your Child’s College Plan
For most parents, the love for their child dominates their
own personal need, only to find that they may become fiscal burdens in their
child’s future. Most will prioritise their kids’ college funding because it is “the
right thing to do.” However, being a good parent also requires being a critical
and thinking parent, and sometimes, your retirement is more important to put
forward because of the following.
1. There
Are Many Alternate College-Funding Sources
You don’t have to build capital to ensure that your child
gets a proper education through a college fund. Your children will have the
option to get grants, financial aid, scholarships and even a college loan that
can help them cover their college costs. Meanwhile, you have no other option
for making up for lost money from retirement savings. Children are also likely
to appreciate your fiscal investment if you tell them they are also part of it.
2. If
Your Retirement Is in Good Shape, Then Consider Saving For College
If your retirement fund is already in good shape, then it is
the time to fund for your child’s college. Remember, there are avenues to get
educational financing. However, you don’t have any alternative for your
retirement fund. You will end up weighing down your kids when they become
successful and you become a burden to them, which could strain your
relationship despite your earlier good intentions.
3. Stick
With Your Financial Plan
Your financial plan gets altered when things go out of hand.
When it does, you end up having to give your children their dreams rather than
fulfilling yours. However, it would end up as big trouble with your children’s
financial plans in the future if you haven’t fulfilled yours, or you are
unsatisfied with your own lifestyle by that time. This is why fulfil your own
dreams and responsibilities to yourself first before your give them anything to
pursue their dreams.
Mga etiketa:
college,
college funding,
education,
finance,
planning
Linggo, Disyembre 7, 2014
Three Quick Ways to Save On Your Christmas Spending
Christmas is just around the corner. You’ve been feeling the
hassles of the Christmas shopping rush, the traffic and the dent it will leave
on your expenses. However, the season of giving doesn’t mean you should give a
lot for the department stores and other retailers. Here are some tips you could
do to decrease your spending.
1. Credit
Cards
A high credit limit
isn’t the quickest solution to help your Christmas spending. While it does
allow you to enjoy the holidays and pay for your debts later, having a
debt-laden Christmas isn’t exactly a bringer of glad tidings. Always use the
money you have on hand. This will limit your expenses and will even improve
your creativity!
2. Consider
Discount Vouchers
Right now, many mobile stores offering assorted items such
as clothes, toys and even vacations have discount coupons. They even let you
have free delivery if you’re just within the country. Think of the amount of
money you’ll save from expenses and gas money!
3. Get
Creative
Christmas is about giving and banking on this idea means imparting
not your money, but your time. Make creative projects that personalise the
items you’re to gift to important people in your life this Christmas. You could
also host a Christmas cook-off where everyone brings their best dishes for
Christmas. This saves you lots in hosting a Christmas in your home and having a
feast with people very important to you.
Lunes, Nobyembre 10, 2014
Things To Take Note When You’re Feeling Demotivated
It’s just the start of the week and I can’t blame you if you
feel quite demotivated to do work or anything. The Monday Blues is now amedically-accepted condition. Dealing with Monday or early-week demotivation can
be hard, but it is possible to do so.
1. Charity
Giving money to charity might be the farthest thing from
your mind. However, you validate your capacity to give to others by doing this.
This will help uplift your spirit and mood, and have confidence in your
capabilities by the start of the next day.
2. Watch
Inspiring Videos
Searching for inspirational videos will help you see that
your Monday Blues is just a speck of psychological trouble compared to people
who had risen from a huge setback. You don’t only get motivated, you actually
get psyched and learn a few lessons that could help inspire confidence in
yourself.
3. List
Your Goals
Listing your goals helps you remember them faster and activates
your body’s “fight” mode. It also helps your body steer itself in the right
direction. Every human being needs a goal, or else life and existence will have
no value at all.
4. Share
the Love
Even if you’re demotivated, showing your parents or your
lover with surprises and love helps you get the same love back. Even if they do
not reciprocate, the feeling could give you a validation of your capability to
exist and express yourself.
Lunes, Oktubre 6, 2014
Things Students Didn’t Know About Their Taxes. Yes, Students Still Pay Taxes.
Today, a full-time student doesn’t exist
anymore because many work with a part-time job while studying. Some have
different jobs to make ends meet during vacations. As a working student, you
have tax liabilities, which the HMRC oversees. But the HMRC is not unfair,
students have a great cut from their payslips, but it is the student’s
responsibility to tell the employers they are not part of the Pay As You Earn
Code.
If you think you had paid too much tax
because of an error on behalf of you or your employer, you must have the
following documents with you before you could launch a dispute: A p60 or p45
from your employer, p11D, details of taxable state benefits received, bank
statements or certificates of tax deducted, building society statements or
certificates of tax deducted, dividend certificates, details of rental income
and expenses.
Students also have some tax credits. As
most college students are still below their twenties, students could claim for
Working Tax Credit or a Child Tax Credit, which could help them reduce the
amount of tax they pay on a monthly basis.
Student entrepreneurs will have some income
tax deductions and will have to pay for their employees national insurance. If
they are self-employed, they need to report their own income to the HMRC.
Huwebes, Setyembre 4, 2014
Three Reasons Why the Real World is Just Like Your College
In 2014, I
entered the 10th year of being a professional out of college and
into the real world. Many things have changed since then. Today, we can check
our emails from our phones and synchronise our contacts from our phone to
social networks. In terms of grades, well they say it’s nice to escape from a
grading system, but actually, it’s still here, except this time, the teachers
are also competing against you.
1.
Financial
Institutions Evaluate Your Grade
When you
become employed, you have to do well at work. The HR will monitor every
activity you do and your superiors your performance in handling your tasks with
your skills. The banks will also observe your spending discipline and
capability. From here, they will assess if they can trust you enough, based on
grade, to take on higher credit limits.
2.
Interest Rates and Grade Level
The higher
your interest rate, the lower your grade level. Grade levels are assessed by
risk values. An unemployed person is equivalent to a freshman and is relatively
unknown to the bank based on his financial conduct. Meanwhile, an employed
person who had accomplished multiple financing on a home and a vehicle can have
lower interest rates.
3.
Outstanding
Students
Banks will
always want their consumers to spend. However, spending on the average way you
use your card will never merit you any higher credit limit or low interest
loans from your bank. Outstanding borrowers have successfully juggled two or more high amount loans at the same time, which helps upgrade their credit score
and earn the respect of their lenders.
Mga etiketa:
finance,
financial institutions,
loans,
management,
personal finance
Miyerkules, Agosto 6, 2014
Three Important Things To Know Before Taking on Microfinancing
Regardless of
your income and possible bank troubles, microfinance lenders help you get
financing you need on a small scale as long as they trust you. Trust is a
crucial factor in making a microfinancing transaction successful, but there are
important things you have to know first.
1.
You Need to Be Employed and of Good Conduct
Microfinancers
are established companies. They can increase your interest rates the more you
fail to pay your dues, but they also know you could just run away from your
debts, leaving them with no profit. During an interview, they will ask you
about your employment, your salary, collateral and your conduct regarding your
work and in the local community.
2.
Different
Requirements for Different Microfinancers
Microfinancers
each have different requirements to ensure transparency and security in the
financing they will provide. Some microfinancers may ask you to pay a small
downpayment. Others may require that you have a background check with the local
security bureau. They may also ask you to surrender your ATM to them until the
debt is paid off.
3.
High
Interest Rates
As you are a
high-risk client, you will be given a high interest rate with your financing.
If you fail to pay your monthly dues, your rates will greatly increase. While
this will not affect your actual credit score, microfinancers have networks in
the area and in other different areas, which makes your record troublesome
should you need another financing in the future.
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