Personal Financial Planning Lesson 5 - Freedom

What does freedom means to you? Financial freedom may mean no more liabilities. It may also mean paying off your mortgage and for some parents, it may mean no more financial woes with regards to “feeding” their children. Financial freedom is a goal which I believe everyone will long for. If desire for it, you should put that dream into your personal financial plan. The plan is there to help us achieve freedom whatever we define it.

Trust me, no matter what financial freedom means to you, it will come true, but not without setting goals and formulating a plan to achieve them.

freedom thumb Personal Financial Planning Lesson 5   Freedom

Read more

Personal Financial Planning Lesson 4 - College

The U.S. Census Bureau did a survey a few years back and revealed that the average income for a male age 25 or over who holds a college’s degree was about $61,000, compared to about $32,000 for a male with a high-school education. A separate study according to the Postsecondary Education Opportunity Research shows that the lifetime earnings of families headed by individuals with a bachelor’s degree will be about $1.6 million more than the incomes of families headed by those with a high-school diploma.

I can’t stress enough the importance of livelong education and how education plays an important role in our financial well being. Of course, we shouldn’t just compare the monetary advantage of a having a higher education because there are many other skills that are ought to be learnt from school. However, it is still easier for us to measure it in terms of dollar and cents inside our financial plans.

college thumb Personal Financial Planning Lesson 4   College

Read more

Personal Financial Planning Lesson 3 - Retirement

Retirement is one of the most significant events that will occur at the end of our working life. And preparing for retirement is by far the most important financial task we all will set to accomplished in our lifetime. Oh, did I mention it is also the most expensive among the goals to achieve?

With all the great breakthroughs in modern medicine, human, on average, are living stronger and longer. Unfortunately, this would also lead to more cases of people outliving their retirement funds.

retirement thumb Personal Financial Planning Lesson 3   Retirement

Read more

Personal Financial Planning Lesson 2 - Let’s Begin

Before we start off building a personal financial plan, we will have to make an honest evaluation of our financial status. This is important stage because the assessment will be a rough readiness gauge prior to us embracing and committing ourselves to our financial plan.

The financial evaluation should consist of our net worth statement and a reasonable projection of our family’s earnings. For those who have just joined the working force, use 3 percent as the annual growth rate of your income. This rate is not far off from the recent rate of inflation and it is close to the average income increment most companies hand out.

financialplanning2 thumb Personal Financial Planning Lesson 2   Let’s Begin

Read more

Personal Financial Planning Lesson 1 - Introduction

Financial Planning is a fluid and continuous process that examines at our financial health in totality. In part of the process, we are looking at organizing and planning our income, expense, and savings to achieve our long-term goals. The most common financial goals that people set today include funding their retirement, financing their kid’s college education or event paying down their mortgage. With proper financial planning, we can make it possible to achieve all these goals.

Personal financial planning covers every portion of our financial life, like how we spend, how we invest or even how we protect your money. In a nutshell, it is about money management that goes beyond investing and saving our money. A working financial plan is a dynamic blueprint that allows adjustment to new life situation such as a marriage, a new baby, divorce, remarriage, medical conditions, college decisions, career changes and death.

financialplanning thumb Personal Financial Planning Lesson 1   Introduction

Read more

Next Page →