Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 3, 2017

The Complete Idiots Guide to Personal Finance In Your 20s And 30s

 Organizing your financial affairs and making the most of your money can be a toughchallenge-especially when you're a young adult busy building a career and, perhaps, afamily. It’s particularly tough because, most likely, no one ever taught you much about managingyour money.
 We've learned to talk openly about sex in recent years, but money seems to bethe last taboo subject. Chances are your parents were fairly secretive about their ownfinancial affairs. And it's dollars to doughnuts that you went through 12 or 16 or more yearsof education without a sensible course in money management.So this is the time to get started.
          
For one thing, the principles learned here will stand you ingood stead throughout life. The fine points may change as you grow older and movethrough various stages of life, but the underlying principles are the same. And, as Benjamin Franklin so wisely said back in the eighteenth century, compound interestis the eighth wonder of the world. In his words, "Money makes money and the money thatmoney makes more money. “In other words, if you get started saving now, while you're young, you'll have far moremoney later in life than you ever dreamed possible. Put away $2,000 a year in a tax-shelteredretirement account-that's just $166 a month-and, as Sarah Fisher and Susan Shelly point out, you'll have $439,000 by the time you reach age 65. And that's if you put the$2,000 away each year for just 10 years and then stop.


Download: http://huyhuu.com/news/16653/The-Complete-Idiots-Guide-to-Personal-Finance-In-Your-20s-And-30s

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