Archive for the ‘Best ISA’ Category
You Gotta Have a Plan
How that is some people can retire at 50? Or not lose their shirt when theres a stock market crash?
Why are some people able to earn high incomes or even have multiple streams of income?
How come some people retire to a life of luxury and world travel, while others barely have enough to feed and house themselves?
Of course, one part of it the answer is that some people are more intelligent and industrious than others. No matter what anyone says, we are not all the same. We may have been created equal, but no one has ever guaranteed us equality of results. That depends on our own efforts.
Another part of the answer is that some people consider the risks they will face and do something before they occur to mitigate the damages. One obvious way of doing this is by buying the proper kinds and amount of insurance to protect your home, health and life if you have an income stream to protect.
Less obvious, but still a very helpful plan is to become an expert at whatever you choose to do to make yourself indispensable to your employer.
If you work for yourself, you want to be the best at whatever it is youre doing, from practicing medicine to baking bread. You also have to have the will to persevere and work long hours at making yourself a success.
Yet another part of the answer is having a plan. Some people get up in the morning and let events carry them along through their day. Others plan what they will do with their life and stick to it.
They will learn about investments and how to diversify, so that when one asset goes down another holds its own or goes up. Or they will hire financial profesionals to do the work for them.
They save as much money as possible, using every tax sheltered vehicle allowed, including 401-Ks, IRAs, Health Savings Plans and 529 educational savings plans. And then they will invest even more in taxable accounts.
They live well within their means. Some like Warren Buffet, one of the worlds richest men, lives well under theirs. They will use credit judiciously or not at all.
Successful people will invest in businesses, rental real estate or work part time, while maintaining their full time job just so they have many streams of income. If one is lost, their world does not come to an end.
Many people play the lottery and hope they will strike it rich. The sad fact is that many think this is the only way get rich. But anybody with the will can find the way.
Our public libraries are filled with books on how to invest, how to insure yourself, how to set up a financial plan or how to open and run a business.
Many employers have tuition reimbursement plans they will pay your way if you want to better yourself. Or community colleges offer free adult education courses to help you learn new skills or improve on the old.
The internet now makes it easy to set up an online business while you continue with your day job.
The bottom line is you have to rely on yourself to earn and save as much as possible. If you do you can be one of the lucky ones who retire young with lots of money to spend.
If you dont youll be living hand to mouth on your Social Security check.
The choice is yours.
Tags: Baking Bread, Damages, Educational Savings, Equality Of Results, Health Savings, Home Health, Income Stream, Incomes, Investments, Iras, Medicine, Multiple Streams Of Income, People, Practicing Medicine, Profesionals, Stock Market Crash, Streams Of Income, Warren Buffet, World Travel, Worlds Richest Men
Women Fear They’ll Have Little Gold in Their Golden Years
Women Fear They’ll Have Little Gold in Their Golden Years
Nearly 40 percent of women aged 30 to 55 are worried about spending their retirement years at or near the poverty level because they cannot adequately save for retirement, according to a recent survey.
The National Women’s 2005 Retirement Survey found that women of color are most concerned about their ability to save for retirement. While 53 percent of women of color report that they expect to live at or near the poverty level in their retirement years, just 33 percent of all men expect to face the same dilemma.
The survey was commissioned by the Heinz Family Philanthropies under the direction of Teresa Heinz, founder of the Women’s Institute for a Secure Retirement and chairman of the Heinz Family Philanthropies.
Here are some of the survey’s other key findings.
* Fifty-two percent of women expect to continue to work once they reach retirement age, including 57 percent of Hispanic women.
* Fifty-four percent of women have little to no money left to save for retirement once they pay their bills, rising to 62 percent among Hispanic and African-American women.
* When asked, “At the present time, do you feel that you are saving enough money for your retirement?” 62 percent of the women surveyed answered “no.” Among women of color, 74 percent of African-American and Hispanic women said they are not saving enough.
* When asked about barriers to saving for retirement, African-American women are more than twice as likely as white women to cite “financial responsibility for adult children or grandchildren” as a reason for not saving for retirement. Of the African-American women supporting their adult children or grandchildren, 63 percent report spending between $100 and $1,000 on them each month.
The Heinz Family Philanthropies commissioned this survey with the Christie Foundation, the Barbara Lee Foundation and others to identify the critical retirement savings issues facing women and to use the data to develop ways to help women secure their financial futures.
The survey polled 1,700 adults and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.4 percentage points.
Tags: Adult Children, African American Women, Barbara Lee, Enough Money, Financial Responsibility, Grandchildren, Heinz Family Philanthropies, Hispanic Women, Lee Foundation, National Women, Poverty Level, Present Time, Retirement Age, Retirement Savings Issues, Retirement Survey, Saving For Retirement, Survey Found That, Teresa Heinz, White Women, Women Of Color
What You Should Know Before Buying Annuities
Americans hear a lot about the shaky outlook for Social Security. In the future, the federal program likely will play a smaller overall role in Americans’ retirement plans.
One way to fill in the gaps of a savings portfolio is to put money in annuities. With an annuity, you pay a premium in exchange for guaranteed income payments at regular intervals. It is most often used for retirement purposes.
The basic types of annuities are equity indexed, fixed rate and variable. The major advantage of annuities is that they all guarantee benefits such as tax-free growth, the ability to pass money directly to heirs or charities and an income stream for life.
Over the past few years, equity-indexed annuities have gained a great deal of popularity. They offer interest or benefits that are linked to an external equity reference – a stock index like the S&P 500, for example. But you get a guaranteed minimum return in exchange for a limited maximum return; that is, you get less upside, but also less downside, to your stock-market investing. Your principal is never at risk.
Fixed-rate annuities, on the other hand, guarantee an interest rate and a declared minimum. They have traditionally been the most popular annuities.
Variable annuities provide more options. They enable you to invest in stock, bonds, mutual funds and money-market instruments.
Reputable financial companies, like TrueYield Financial, want to make sure investors are comfortable when purchasing annuities. Here are some tips for the potential investor.
* Be sure the firm you work with is not limited to offering just one company’s annuities. There are many options available, so work with an agent that can get the one that best fits your needs.
* Understand what you are buying. Talk to your financial adviser or agent about which annuity may be right for your retirement portfolio. Fully understand the annuity contract you are considering.
* Define your goals. Annuities can be used to accomplish a number of financial goals. For example, they can supplement your monthly income or provide emergency funds. Decide which purpose your annuity will serve.
* Ask your agent if you have a “free look” period to review your annuity contract and make sure you have made the right decision.
* Investigate whether or not a bonus annuity is right for you. Bonus annuities credit premium bonuses to allow a retirement saver to make up for stock market loss or to provide an immediate boost to the account value.
Tags: Annuity Contract, Downside, Equity Indexed Annuities, External Equity, Financial Adviser, Fixed Annuities, Fixed Rate Annuities, Gaps, Guarantee Benefits, Heirs, Income Payments, Income Stream, Intervals, Maximum Return, Money Market Instruments, Retirement Portfolio, Retirement Purposes, Stock Index, Stock Market, Variable Annuities
Utilizing Your Financial Safety Net
Where do you keep your money that you set aside for annual or semi-annual payments or for emergencies where you need extra cash quickly? You dont want to draw funds from any of your savings or investment accounts there may be a penalty for early withdrawal or it might be financially disadvantageous at that time.
Most people just keep what they have in their checking accounts where it earns nothing or next to nothing. Some dont keep funds for emergencies and just hope for the best or depend on luck.
Luck always seems to be against the man who depends on it.
-Unknown
Heres another question. Do you set anything aside in case you need to pay the deductible on an insurance claim?
A good place to put funds for infrequent payments or for possible emergencies is in a money market account where interest rates are most often higher than savings accounts and are more accessible. Some banks offer even higher rates on Internet money market accounts. You really need to check your banks rates on various types of accounts to see which would be best. Its good to compare banks. There can be a big difference. Money market accounts require a higher balance, but the amount you will need to keep in it will more than meet that.
The good thing about money market accounts is that even though there is a limited number of checks you can write on it in a given time period, it is usually more than enough for most people.
When you plan your budget, you will need to make payments to this account until the balance is sufficient to cover your home and auto annual or bi-annual payments and cover all your deductibles for your home, auto, medical and dental policies. Once this account is fully funded, the interest earned will be able to reduce your monthly budget payments that go to replace that which was used for insurance payments or for emergencies.
With this account in place, you will be able to take the highest deductible allowed thereby reducing your monthly insurance payment. If you pay your auto insurance quarterly or twice a year, you now will be able to make an annual payment, saving on the service charges.
Money market accounts may not earn the kind of return as a mutual fund or other types of investments but it is definitely better than most savings and checking account interest rates. Money market accounts have the advantage of easy access for your infrequent financial needs.
With a little self-discipline, you can give yourself some efficient financial security by enabling your money to work for you in several ways.
Tags: Budget Payments, Checking Accounts, Deductibles, Dental Policies, Emergencies, Extra Cash, Financial Safety, Home Auto, Insurance Claim, Insurance Payment, Insurance Payments, Internet Money, Investment Accounts, Money Market Account, Money Market Accounts, Monthly Budget, Safety Net, Savings Accounts, Thing About Money, Time Period
US Banks Are In Trouble! Don’t let their mistakes
US Banks Are In Trouble! Don’t let their mistakes affect your financial situation!
Banks serve a tremendous purpose in this world.
They take in individuals deposits and pool them together to lend them to businesses or individuals who need the capital for a business opportunity they have. This business opportunity could be a company that wants to expand or an individual who wants to buy a home.
The more that people save, the more money that is in the banking system and this increased money leads to more loans and more economic growth. This growth is natural and healthy because people’s savings represent capital they could use in the future for more purchases. Thus, when a business borrows more money and invests that capital to be able to manufacture more goods it is a smart decision because people already have more money saved to spend on these goods.
This becomes a healthy circular formula that is summarized as such: “higher savings” leads to “more loans to businesses” which leads to “more business investment” which leads to “great consumer choices” and of course more jobs are created along the way which further fuels the economy forward.
Well, most of us are aware that the rate of US savings was actually negative last year, meaning we spent more than we made. This is down from saving 7.5% of our salaries only 30 years ago. So we see that this current economic boom has not been built upon by people’s savings.
On the other hand, economies also grow when interest rates are set artificially low as they were set in the US. These low rates spurred the real estate bubble to new, incredible prices never before seen in the US and the world. And the amazing thing is that there is no economic justification for these high home prices outside of the herd mentality thinking that prices will keep going up.
Well, we have passed that point and are now seeing decreasing prices and increasing inventories of homes available for sale.
The problem with banks is that they get caught up in the herd mentality as well, increasing the amount of money they lend for people to buy homes. And not only that, they are doing so in a riskier and riskier fashion using adjustable rate mortgages.
Currently, US commercial banks face incredible risks because over 60% of their total earning assets are mortgage-related!!! Let me repeat that, over 60% of US commercial bank’s assets are mortgage related – a postwar record high.
As a result of the above risks faced by banks any problems happening in the real estate market would have strong negative ramifications for the US banking system. As an example, the Japanese banking system was crippled after the boom of the 1980’s when they concentrated much of their capital in real estate. Japan spent the following 14 years in an economic doldrum and is now just beginning to see the light of day.
Now that interest rates are going up, and will continue going up, people who used adjustable mortgages are feeling the pinch of increasing monthly mortgage payments. As a result, foreclosure rates are up 38% over last year and bank’s bottom lines are feeling this pinch.
Billionaire Warren Buffet recently said that he has been studying recent bank balance sheets and is very concerned about the growing number of defaults on their books.
The point is that even though banks aren’t prepared and well diversified it means that you should be even more so! How to prepare yourself is discussed in detail in the recently issued eReport entitled “Recession – How To Survive and Thrive”.
Tags: Banking System, Banks, Business Investment, Business Opportunity, Consumer Choices, Economic Boom, Economic Growth, Economic Justification, Economy, Financial Situation, Herd Mentality, Interest Rates, Inventories, Jobs, Loans, Money System, Pool, Real Estate Bubble, Salaries, Smart Decision
Top 5 Reasons To Opt For An Internet Bank Account
Top 5 Reasons To Opt For An Internet Bank Account
Over recent years online banking has become increasingly popular, and many consumers have started to enjoy the benefits of banking online. There are many different reasons why people decide to opt for an online bank account, and in the space of around six years the number of consumers using online banking has more than doubled. Here are some of the top reasons for opting for online banking.
1. Convenience and ease. With online banking you do not have to even leave the house or pick up the phone in order to conduct your banking transactions. Thanks to the Internet you can now perform these transactions from the comfort and privacy of your own home, and at any time of the day or night, so there are no time constraints to worry about.
2. No queuing or rushing necessary. Many people with full time jobs have had to rely on their lunch hour to try and get to the bank and conduct a transaction in the past. Often this resulted in lengthy queues and rushing around, with little time to actually enjoy your break and have a bite to eat. With online banking this becomes a thing of the past.
3. Choice of transactions. With online banking you can perform most transaction that you would be able to perform by visiting the branch or calling the bank. This includes setting up or calling standing orders or direct debits, transferring cash, making bill payments, checking your statement, and even ordering a new check book or card. You can also apply for other services such as a credit card via the Internet.
4. Special offers and incentives. Often you will find that online banks offer special incentives and offers to those that open up a bank account or savings account with them, such as a sum of cash credited into the account once you have been a customers and met the necessary requirements for a specified amount of time.
5. Saving valuable time. In this day and age time is of the essence, and people simply dont have much time to dedicate to their finances. With online banking you can conduct your transactions or check your statement at the touch of a button, saving you time and hassle when it comes to managing your bank account.
Tags: Amount Of Time, Banks, Bill Payments, Consumers, Convenience, Direct Debits, Full Time, Incentives, Internet Bank Account, Little Time, Lunch Hour, Many Different Reasons, Necessary Requirements, Queues, Six Years, Special Offers, Time Constraints, Time Is Of The Essence, Time Jobs, Time Of The Day
Tips on how to save money
Money is an essential element in every bodys life. It is the one that we exchange to get all the necessary things in life. And that is exactly the reason why we work all day and sometimes night. Since the flow of money in ones life is not uniform, it is only prudent to save some money for the crunch days. Economics permits one to spend his/her money in any amount as he/she wishes. But how rationally one could plan so as to maintain a minimum level of backup in any given day is directly linked with his/her ability to save.
In daily life, even if we know that we are spending money to buy things we need, most of us tend to over see the fact that more than 50% of the spending is for purposes that are quite unnecessary or those expenditures can be avoided without affecting ones basic life style. Exactly this is the point from where one should start thinking of saving money.
Distinguish between and clearly understand your needs and wants. Needs are those things one require to sustain his/her basic needs. Want on the other hand refers to anything that is not an absolute necessity but which presence enhances ones way of life. For example, a car can be a need but a $40,000 SUV is a want.
It is a human nature to insist on the best and the biggest even if the same quality is available at a lower cost. Spending $100 in a posh restaurant when one can afford the same sumptuous meal at $20 or buying a $20 shirt with a $30 trendy label attached all belong to this category of keeping up with the Joneses. A bit of intelligent spending here can save a lot.
It is a good idea to try a commodity and get a feel of it before actually buying one. Because there is no point in buying something you may never use or hardly use. Such an analysis is relevant especially when the item under consideration is a costly one. Rent one, borrow one, and try one out before making the final call.
Mortgages can easily be the biggest single expense most families have in their monthly budget. Here, zeroing on the best deal is where the trick lies. Calculated comparisons can make a difference of few thousand dollars in the entire deal. Another big expense is linked with the vehicles a person owns. One should see if he/she is getting the best deal on the maintenance, insurance and repairs.
True, food is a need as well as a recurring expense. Keeping a check over the money spend on food to a necessary extend – can make a big difference in the money one could save at the end of the month. Plan food purchases in advance, go for generics or store brands and stock up the items that you regularly use when available on sale.
Another expenditure that drains a lot of money is ones fascination for clothes. Unlike electronic goods, the price of clothes is continuously on an upward spiral. Hence it is a good idea to buy quality clothes that lasts a longer period. Such clothes are better than the throw away types. The cost of clothes is not going to come down either. Therefore, buying in advance for a season ahead is a logical correct step. But never over do it. Getting clothes for 5 years in advance is stupid!
Telephone is a common thing in every house hold. This is one department where money drains like an open tap. Though local phone service has a fixed price long distance calls matters. Shop around to find out the best deal as far as the service provider is concerned. Keep in mind, a saving of $16.75 a month can add up to $200 a year.
If you are a travel addict, travel expenses can make a big difference if not having the right travel agent. Even if it is the same place, airline, hotel or car rental, the difference between two travelers can easily exceed $1000. Keep ones eyes and ears open when hunting for a traveler.
Remember, saving money is not putting all the dollars that one earns in his/her savings account. But it is all about intelligently spending the bucks, at the same keeping a check on all the unnecessary expenses. Good Luck!
Tags: Commodity, Crunch, Economics, Element, Expenditures, Final Call, How To Save Money, Human Nature, Keeping Up With The Joneses, Life Style, Money Money, Monthly Budget, Mortgages, Posh Restaurant, Presence, Saving Money, Spending Money, Sumptuous Meal, Tips On How To Save Money, Way Of Life
The Threshold between Wealth Creation & Destruction
Wealth is simply the accumulation of money, and it can only be created by the amount of money that is received and never spent. If you want to build wealth, then anytime you receive money: dont spend all of it. Sure it is a very simple concept, but it is very difficult to continually achieve. Luckily there are readily available allies to help you: find some compelling reasons to start saving, build it into a habit, watch the results of your efforts build, and set some financial milestones to reward yourself.
Setting aside a percentage of any money that you receive is the best method to follow through and build the habit of saving money. There are a few misers among us who find saving easy to do, but most people want to spend far more than is earned; let alone have the discipline of spending less than what they earn. So it starts as an uphill mental and emotional battle that gets easier by following through with the habit, and seeing the results of your effort. Spending less than what you earn every week, every month, every year, is the only way to amass money.
How much money should you set aside to build up savings? It should be a percentage so that you automatically move it into a separate savings account anytime you receive income, without exception. It is my experience that the range of 3% to 10% is the most successful starting percentage for people who continue saving over long periods of time. Saving only 3% is so small that it is nearly painless to even the lowest income earners (this is actually where I began years ago). Selecting a percentage under 3% accumulates to such a tiny amount of savings that I havent heard of anyone sticking with it. And starting out by setting aside over 10% is too painful for even high income earners to withstand, because they are so accustomed to spending on every whim. As you repeatedly save a set percentage rate, it will become more habitual, automatic and expected. Then youll be ready to increase your percentage rate. And the higher the savings rate, your growing pile of money will create more motivation to continue to save. This summer, I spoke with a successful saver who lives very well on only 30% of his income. Because he saved diligently to continually buy rental homes, after a couple decades he earns over a million a year in rental income by Ashville, North Carolina.
In the fragile first years of saving money, it can take only a single wrong financial move to wipe out everything that youve saved so far. And the most common wrong move doesnt look like it when it is occurring. This draining move can also start insidiously small and build a different habit, the wealth-destruction habit. You know the problem: pay your credit card balance in its entirety, every month, without exception. As an example, if you havent saved money for a vacation before you depart, and then charge it all to your credit card, there is a giant probability that you wont pay it off for a very long time. The credit card companies know this and they are extracting interest dollars from you instead of earning interest yourself. Youve shifted to the dark side of wealth destruction where it is more common for your credit card balance to grow than shrink.
Lets get back to building your wealth. Once you start setting aside the savings percentage that youve decided and opened a dedicated savings account, you need to closely review your account statements for motivation. Reviewing the progress that youve made so far youll see how you are moving toward financial goals can be self-reinforcing. And another motivator is rewarding yourself by spending some money on yourself when youve reached certain milestones. For example, you could start with a goal of accruing $500, and reward yourself with something meaningful; and then each time you double your amount of savings you get another reward. My advice is to at least begin with a savings percentage, even as small as my 3%, and allow this simple concept be of great financial benefit to you.
Tags: Accumulation, Allies, Amount Of Money, Discipline, Emotional Battle, Habit, How Much Money, Income Earners, Long Periods Of Time, Milestones, Misers, Percentage Rate, Saving Money, Threshold, Wealth Creation, Whim
The Offshore Money Flow Solution
It’s become more and more difficult to bank in privacy these days, thanks to the witch-hunt of OECD and FATF under the guise of money laundering and terrorism. What a wonderful story to cover the real purpose of their; to take the privacy away from people, to control and to endlessly supervise!
Fortunately there still are a few opportunities left for us, who value financial privacy. These precisely planned strategies, which have been used for decades, have worked for people from all walks of life. For people, who has decided to keep what belongs to them and not to hand it over for greed goverments, ex-lovers, creditors etc. But no matter how good the strategy is, if you are a bigmounth and like to brag with your fancy overseas banking solutions, the cover is blown sooner than later. So keep your mouth shut and stay under the radar screen.
For the start, you need a so-called Pass-Through Account. The most important feature of this account is secrecy, it’s paramount. This account must be opened in a jurisdiction with a bullet-proof banking secrecy laws. Bullet-proof really isn’t the case anymore, unfortunately, as way too many so called tax havens have been forced to give away information. But it still is possible to open an anonymous bank account. Even if the banking secrecy laws fail under the pressure of “Big Boys”, the “bureau-rats” still don’t know who’s the owner of the account. So, you are safe from the very beginning!
This first account is the one you make known to your clients and business associates. You will receive all the incoming funds from and send the outgoing funds to the outside World. As the name says, and this is essential to remembet, this account is not to store money. Because of that, you don’t have to be too concerner about the long-term stability of the bank and jurisdiction involved. This fact enables you to use tiny, private banks, which offer the best secrecy and confidentally. Over and above you get the most personalized service!
The second account you will need, is called Stash Account. The most important feature of this account is stability. The Stash Account must be opened in a stable, first world jurisdiction and in a well known bank. This is the account you send your profits to as soon as they arrive in your Pass-Through account. You store your money here long-term, send it off to offshore investments or shift it into spend and savings accounts. The existence of Stash Account is a complete secret! You tell nobody! Never, ever!
The third account you need, is Spend Account. Here the accessibility is the key feature. Sometime you might want to withdraw your offshore profits in cash. Even if you have multiply income streams onshore, you must always be prepared for emergencies and have an access to your offshore funds. Because of that, you will open Spend Account at a bank that gives you the best selection of
debit and credit cards and also a proper online banking access.
When you have opened these three accounts, you are ready to start fighting for your privacy. And the best part is, that you can win the fight, really! It just takes a little research and the best partners.
Tags: Anonymous Bank Account, Banking Secrecy, Banking Solutions, Big Boys, Bullet Proof, Days Thanks, Fatf, Financial Privacy, Flow Solution, Money Flow, Money Laundering, Offshore Money, Private Banks, Radar Screen, Secrecy Laws, Tax Havens, Term Stability, Walks Of Life, Witch Hunt, Wonderful Story
The Best Advice Ever About Money
Wanna know the best advice ever you can get about money?
Here it is…
Let’s say that you are getting regular monthly salary from work and you are happy with it. Now, at the end of the month (and most of the time, two days after you get your paychecks), you wonder where all your money is gone.
You begin reasoning.
30% of it goes to house mortgage.
20% of it goes to car payment.
10% of it goes to credit card payment.
5% of it goes to utility bills.
etc, etc, etc…
“That should be fine. I’ve got all taken care of. Next month, I’ll get another paycheck and the same cycle goes on and on… enough for me to survive the whole life.”
Well, you gotta be careful now.
What happens if your car broke down?
What happens if your kitchen needed renovation after a heavy storm last night?
What happens if you suddenly forgot that you’ve overspent your credit card?
What happens if you fell sick?
Things could be worse, and now is the time that the cliche “Fix your roof on a sunny day” is very much true to you.
You don’t want this to happen to you, right?
There could be thousands of things that could go wrong in our lives but unless we realize that we need to prepare for the worse, we’ll never get ahead of ourselves.
Sometimes, fixed salary could be a good thing for you because you can plan with what you want to do with your money on a predicatble basis. Though I strongly believe that you still need a secondary income – preferably a recurring secondary income – to improve your financial situation at any level.
And, the best plan to improving your financial situation is…
PAY YOURSELF FIRST.
That’s right!
Regardless if you have $300,000 of house mortgage or a $100,000 savings in the bank, make it a habit to pay yourself right after you get your monthly paychecks. This habit will definitely help.
Let’s see…
You’ve been paying everybody you owe every month. You pay the bills, the banks, the mechanics, the who knows who and you actually get nothing, except settling the scores.
There’s just another person that you forget to pay – that is YOU.
Imagine yourself as a bill collector on yourself. No matter what, you have to pay yourself at the beginning of every month (I suggest 10% of your salary. The more is better) – or else you cease to function as yourself.
Never fail to pay your SELF and only after you pay yourself, then you pay the others.
Hard?
Yes, at first, but once you put the action of “Paying Yourself First” into habit, you’ll actually enjoy doing it, knowing that you do good deeds to yourself.
Try it once. Then do it the second month. And then, another… and another.
PAY YOURSELF FIRST because you deserve much more than the other bill collectors.
Tags: Banks, Car Payment, Cliche, Credit Card Payment, Financial Situation, Habit, Mechanics, Money Advice, Mortgage, Pay Bills, Paycheck, Paychecks, Renovation, Salary, Secondary Income, Sick Things, Sunny Day, Utility Bills, Whole Life