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      Some Thoughts on Personal 
      Finance for Post-Graduates 
      by Lee McGaanlast updated 7/25/2009
 
        
        Control Debt.  
        - Serious debt problems take a big toll on your life emotionally as well 
        as financially.  Money problems often destroy relationships! 
 
          
          Check out school 
          loan consolidation (be conscious of rates and terms)
          
          AVOID credit card debt. 
 
            
            If you use 
            them pay them off each month!!
            If you have cc 
            debt now, pay it off before doing anything else!!
            Minimum 
            payments last forever and the interest rates will kill you.
          Protect your 
          credit rating.  It's more important than ever:
 
            
            Credit affects 
            the interest rate you pay and your ability to finance homes, new businesses, 
            emergencies, etc.
            Credit reports 
            are being used to determine insurance rates or even your ability to 
            get various kinds of insurance (e.g. home owners, health, 
            disability, auto).
            Potential 
            employers may do a credit check and use that in hiring decisions.
            What's in your 
            credit report?  Employment  history and salary, current 
			salary, current debt and open lines of credit (limits), all bank 
			accounts, credit accounts and many other accounts, home address (for a 
            number of years back), debt payment information.
            It takes 5-10 
            years to repair a bad credit report.
            What counts 
            against your credit rating?
 
              
              Significant 
              open lines of credit 
				in relation to your income, and especially, credit used (i.e. 
				current debt) as a portion of your debt limit.
              substantial 
              debt in relation to your income.
              short length 
              of employment with current employer
              Late 
              payments (30, 60, 90+ days)
              bad checks, 
              etc.
              Debts in 
              COLECTION and "write offs"
              Multiple 
              credit inquiries (not in a short time period)
              bankruptcy
              criminal 
              record
              application information for $150,000 life ins. and up
              law suits,      
				etc.
            Get a 
			copy of 
            your credit report if you have used credit.  
            Be sure you 
            correct errors (Check on the
            internet for 
            how to do this).
            If you haven't 
            used credit in your own name, establish (good) credit ASAP. 
            -- Get a credit card and run small bills you pay fully on time every 
            month.)
            Keeping lines 
			of credit open (and paid) for a long time is generally good. It 
			shows stability.
		Pay yourself 
          first.  Start saving right away.  "There are always 
          reasons to postpone starting a savings program, but there are no good 
          ones."  A reasonable amount of savings gives you security and an 
          amazing amount of freedom.  Eventually, esp. if you are married, 
          you should have available cash equal to 3-6 months take-home pay.  
          If you put a reasonable amount into savings ever paycheck, you won't 
          miss the money and it will really add up.
		Try to 
		avoid 
          buying a car with an auto loan.  Car loans, like credit cards, 
          can keep you paying interest and in debt, forever.  And the rates 
          are too high usually (unless you have great credit).  If you have 
          to borrow money for a car, buy a cheaper but reliable one, and borrow 
          the money from family, if you can.  Over a 40 year working life, 
          buying a car with loans and getting a new car with a new loan when the 
          old one is paid off can easily cost you $150,000 at retirement -- plus 
          it lowers your standard of living all that time.  Save and buy 
          the car with cash!!
		Determine to live within 
          your income (and, in the end, you must).  Beware of the little 
          things that get you.  If you spend $4 a day at 
          Starbucks (vs $.80 at the drive-through) rather than investing 
          that $4 in stocks, over 30 years - you've lost a potential $130,000.  
          Think about it!!
		Begin investing 
		in your future (a home, retirement, etc.) right away.  
          Take advantage of 401Ks if your employer has one.  Max it out!!  
          OR start an IRA as soon as you get a job.  A maxed out IRA 
          will probably make you a millionaire (I'm NOT kidding here) at 
          retirement.  Put your long-term savings in an "Index Fund" 
		or at least a low cost mutual fund.
 Remember the power of 
		"compounding" (the doubling rule) by investing where earnings are re-invested 
          automatically.  For retirement and other long-term savings, the 
          first 7-10 years of savings are as important as the entire rest of 
          your career. 
          READ 
          THIS Short ARTICLE!!! and you'll see some amazing numbers.  
		Or
		
		do your own calculations to see how saving and investing could work 
		for you.
 
		Develop a budget 
          so you won't get caught unable to pay essential bills (and thus you 
          can avoid bad debt - see above).  Talk to your parents about how their 
          expenses work.  1) allocate to savings first with each pay check,  
          2) allocate money to upcoming bills, next,  3) spend only what's 
          left after that.
		Don't use money 
          to feed your ego or try to keep up with others (who may be dying under 
          the debt load).  And don't use money to try to buy happiness.  
          But use savings to try to avoid misery. 
		If you need 
          insurance to protect your loved ones, by term insurance first. (Check 
          out TIAA-CREF for good prices.)  Think twice about "whole life" 
          as it is  really a savings plan and maybe not a very good one. 
      Materials for this page are adapted 
      from the instructor's experience, a variety of places on The Motley Fool 
      financial advice web site (fool.com) and, esp, Fool Staff Writers, "Ten 
      Things to Teach Your Kids About Money."  The Motley Fool.  
      2002.  <http://www.fool.com/moneytip/2002/tip020926.htm>  
      (26 September 2002) |