Friday, February 12, 2010
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Debate Pros and Cons of Regulation of Two Prominent Economists
Meltzer said the proper course of action is to eliminate taxpayer relief for financial institutions that have come to be called “too big to fail.” “If we don’t get rid of ‘too big to fail,’ we’ll sooner or later have another crisis just as bad as this because ‘too big to fail’ encourages banks to believe that they make the profits and the taxpayers take the losses.” read more...
Friday, December 25, 2009
Hierarchy of Financial Success
One approach that you can take is to use the concept of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Abraham Maslow has set up a hierarchy of five levels of basic needs (Physiological, Safety, Social, Esteem, Self Actualization). Beyond these needs, higher levels of needs exist. These include needs for understanding, esthetic appreciation and purely spiritual needs. In the levels of the five basic needs, the person does not feel the second need until the demands of the first have been satisfied, nor the third until the second has been satisfied, and so on.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Should you save money for a rainy day?
The first step is to face the future squarely and define the challenge: decide what your goal is first and then make a plan.Your goal will not happen just because you defined it.But neither will an investment plan work, if you have no goal to begin with.So, take the time to plan your goals.Dream a dream, if you want to.But do it.Now. Sticking a wad of cash under your mattress may sound like solid advice your great-grandmother gave you, but unless you're getting a healthy return on your investment, it's a poor personal financial choice. One of the oldest rules of personal finance is the simple admonition to pay yourself first. All the money books tell you to do it. All the personal finance blogs say it, too. Even your parents have given you the same advice.
Should you save money for a rainy day? Yes! But instead of hiding it in your home (or even sticking it in a bank account without some deeper analysis of the interest rates), you're doing yourself a disservice and turning down money that is rightfully yours! To pay yourself first means simply this: Before you pay your bills, before you buy groceries, before you do anything else, set aside a portion of your income to save. Put the money into your 401(k), your Roth IRA, or your savings account. The first bill you pay each month should be to yourself. This habit, developed early, can help you build tremendous wealth. If you’re just getting started in the Real World, saving may seem impossible. You have rent, a car payment, groceries, and maybe student loans. Sure, you’d like to save, but there’s just no money left at the end of the month. And that’s the problem: Most people save what’s left over — left over after bills and after discretionary spending.But if you don’t develop the saving habit now, there are always going to be reasons to delay: you need dental work, you want to go to Mexico with your friends, you aren’t making enough to pay your bills. Start saving now instead of waiting until next year (or the year after)
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