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I have always enjoyed Scott Adams, convinced that he worked for the same company I do in my day job. (He doesn’t, by the way) When I read this, I was impressed and thought I’d pass it along.

  1. Make a will
  2. Pay off your credit cards
  3. Get term life insurance if you have a family to support
  4. Fund your 401k to the maximum
  5. Fund your IRA to the maximum
  6. Buy a house if you want to live in a house and can afford it
  7. Put six months worth of expenses in a money-market account
  8. Take whatever money is left over and invest 70% in a stock index fund and 30% in a bond fund through any discount broker and never touch it until retirement
  9. If any of this confuses you, or you have something special going on (retirement, college planning, tax issues), hire a fee-based financial planner, not one who charges a percentage of your portfolio

I wasn’t planning to make a habit of quoting other author’s advice, but this was too good to overlook. This is from Scott Adams’ book “Dilbert and the Way of the Weasels.” As Scott Adams states, “Everything else you may want to do with your money is a bad idea compared to what’s on my one-page summary. You want an annuity? It’s worse. You want a whole life insurance policy? It’s worse. You want to invest in individual stocks? It’s worse. You want a managed mutual fund instead of an index fund? It’s worse. I could go on, but you get the point.”
I might put a caveat on the 401(k) advice (see my article), but these rules are worth reading and following.

JOE

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Marginal Tax Rates Explained

One financial term often used, but not always understood, is ‘Marginal Tax Rate’ or Marginal Rate for short. It’s used so often that financial writers take its meaning for granted. Today, in a guest post at Bible Money Matters, I offer What Is A Marginal Tax Rate, And How Can You Use It To Save? Please visit and let me know what you think, I’ll stop by as well to answer any questions that you may have.

If you are a reader from Canada, why not visit my fellow Money Maven Tom Drake’s site Canadian Finance Blog and read Marginal Tax Rates Explained.

Happy Monday,
Joe

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PF Bloggers’ Weekly Roundup

There are times I sit back and am awestruck at how much there is to say about personal finance. I follow a few dozen PF bloggers, and week after week, they offer, as I try to, a new spin on every aspect of finance.

I’m also reminded I need to keep updating my popular List of Lists, as the new ones are pretty list-worthy. This week’s Ten Myths About Money That You Cannot Afford to Ignore offers a nice myth list including “You Can Time The Market” (uh, not really) and “Gold Is The Best Hedge Against Inflation” (not so, it barely kept up with inflation since 1933.) Two myths I question are “Living Costs Will Fall In Retirement” (I think it depends on the individual. Half my income goes to Mortgage/Retirement saving/College savings so I expect our expenses will drop on retiring as these expenses go away) and “The Reward Points On Your Credit Card Are Worth It” (I agree it’s a myth if you are paying interest and fees. Me, I’ve not paid a cent for either.) A great list by Hank at Own The Dollar.

Wise Breads post 9 Money Saving Reasons to Buy a Food Dehydrator may not make the List, but it does make me want to get my dehydrator out and dry some things. When I first bought it, a decade ago, I remember buying grapes on sale at the height of the season and making huge raisins that were delicious. I also turned cans of sliced pineapple slices into the best dried fruit ever. No sulphur, which gives some people a headache, and no preservatives.

As the father of a soon to be 11 year old, the concept of wants vs needs is a recurring theme, so Budgets are Sexy’s Wants vs. Needs: What’s the difference? was pretty timely for me. I need to have Jane 2.0 read it and perhaps prompt her to guest post her take on this.

Debt Hawk helps us plan ahead with 10 Ways To Prepare For A Layoff. You say your job is secure? Really? Is anyone’s? Read this post and heed the advice. Better that you should get a head start on this, getting re-employed even a week sooner and banking that severance. And if the layoff doesn’t come, you may still find the advice you pick up to land you a better position.

Next, Baker from Man vs Debt is now a staff writer at Get Rich Slowly. This week he offers 11 Ways to Spice Up Your Emergency Fund, in which he once again takes an old (even boring) topic and gives it a new spin, getting you thinking about how you can approach this from a different angle. As always, a pleasure reading my friend, Baker.

Mrs Micah asks (and answers) What Can and Can’t Your Credit Card (Company) Do? discussing the new laws the CARD act introduces, and how the credit card companies can’t gouge you quite so much as they used to. She also provides a further link to a slideshow which offers more detail on this new law.

Last, Kay Bell, author of Don’t Mess with Taxes alerted her readers that congress may implement a sugar tax in her post Soda tax support from doctors. I commented that I find such a tax, in fact any tax on food or necessary staples, to be regressive as the poor spend a higher portion of their income on these items.

My thanks to all my fellow bloggers for such an interesting week.
Joe

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Bernanke Declares Recession Over

bernanke

A Double dip coming?

Joe

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Frugal Friday Week 18

The eBay edition.

When looking for ways to save, one thing to consider is purchasing on eBay. If you don’t already have an account, you can still search on the site to see the kind of savings you might find. Of course, you need to first be aware of the true value of the item and the price you are willing to pay. Don’t get caught up in the auction frenzy that has some items I’ve seen selling for above retail, that’s just crazy.

Let me share with you two recent purchases we made on eBay whose purchases I consider frugal.

stereo

Pioneer Stereo VSX-305. Won for $51 (+$20 shipping). We have two stereos in our house one on first floor, one upstairs. The first floor one is this exact model, which is about 12 years old, new it was $250, if I recall correctly. The second floor one just gave up the ghost after 25 years, (!) I had it while in college so I know it lasted. I thought I might find the VSX-305 on eBay and sure enough, there were a number of auctions in progress as well as history. The great thing with the eBay system is that you can view completed auctions, seeing the sale price and using that information to decide how much you wish to bid. You’ll be surprised to find some auctions getting bid up by new users who seem to not understand the value of some items, and some items going for far less than they should. To me, this was a fair price, and while we would have waited a while, we enjoy our music.

macg4

Next, we wanted a “family computer” that our daughter could use for schoolwork, loading her iPod, etc. Being a Mac fan, and still using a late model Mac as my own computer, I started the eBay search. The Mac I bought was a Dual 1.25 GHz model, introduced in Aug 2002 at just over $3000, I was able to pay just $175 plus about $40 shipping. This will run the Mac OS ‘Leopard’ but not the Snow Leopard just introduced, as SL requires an Intel chip, this Mac is the last Motorola PPC machine Apple made. It can handle video editing, and is happy to run software that lets it transfer to/from the TiVo with no complications. (I’m sure PCs are available at similar savings, I just happen to prefer the Mac for my home computing.)

This is a brief example of my eBay success, check it out for books, clothing, any item you know exactly what you are looking for and the price that makes sense to you.

Enjoy the weekend,
Joe

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