Archive for the ‘Economy’ Category

Too Small to Fail

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

 

Photo: RLEVANS

You’ve heard of Too Big to Fail, right? Well, this week I want to introduce you to a simple personal budgeting tactic I call Too Small to Fail. Around my house, this dumb little idea helps my family keep our savings on track and, if you want to be hyperbolic about it, prevent financial collapse. (See, it’s the opposite of Too Big to Fail in more ways than one.) Before I explain how it works, let’s look at what’s wrong with a traditional budget.

Budgets ask you to look into the future. People are not good at looking into the future. Just watch a World of Tomorrow filmstrip. Where are my helpful robots? (Zhu Zhu hamsters are not helpful!)

Predictions about money are even less accurate. How much am I going to spend on dining over the next month? Beats the heck out of me. Will we be invited out to dinner? How much money is left after buying groceries? Trying to sit down and write a line item each for groceries, dining, entertainment, and so on is silly. You’ll get the numbers wrong and then feel guilty about it later.

Some people renegotiate their budget over the course of the month. “Okay, we overspent on dining already, so we’ll take some money out of entertainment and skip the movies.” If it’s so negotiable, why write it down in the first place?

I remember my parents making this kind of budget when I was a kid. Once a month, they’d sit at the dining room table and argue. You could see the DON’T COME IN HERE waves from several rooms away. When I grew up and got married, my wife and I adopted the same system, because we didn’t know any better.

Well, not anymore. Too Small to Fail relies on two insights:

1. Budgets make you worry most about small expenses, because those are the negotiable ones. As Michael Rubin put it in a MintLife article last August, budgeting can lead to “relentless focus on minor expenses.” So in our budget, we throw all the small-ticket items into the same category: groceries, dining, entertainment, it’s all the same. If we spend more on dining one week, we spend less on groceries. The total amount in the bucket is important, but the amount spent on each little category isn’t.

To illustrate, our monthly budget (with made-up numbers) looks something like this:

Rent:$100
Phone:$50
Retirement:$25
Vacation fund:$12
Small-ticket items:$30

The numbers are all basically the same from month to month, and as long as it all adds up to less than our monthly income, we’re good.

2. You don’t have to let your boss decide how often you get paid. Have you ever had a job where you were paid monthly? My wife gets a monthly paycheck. I don’t know about you, but I am incapable of making any sum of money last a whole month. Remember Brewster’s Millions? I could have blown the $30 mil in two weeks.

Instead, why not pay yourself weekly? That’s how we do it. We pay ourselves a lump sum every Friday to be used for our daily expenses. (Monthly, nonnegotiable items like rent and utilities come out of a separate account.) Because the money only has to last a week, it’s hard for us to get into much trouble. Sure enough, every week, we spend most of our allowance in the first three days. But then there are only four days left. If we run out of cash on Wednesday and have to raid the pasta drawer for a couple of days, big deal.

I know, this sounds anal and artificial. It is. It’s also effective. Ramit Sethi, author of I Will Teach You to Be Rich, advises you to use barriers to prevent yourself from spending. The classic example is freezing your credit card in a block of ice. This is the same idea: I’m not really out of money when the weekly allowance is spent. But to get more money, I’d have to dip into another account. That’s enough of a barrier to make me slap my own hand and say, “Don’t do that.”

You could even pay yourself twice a week. Or you could use this system to give a separate allowance to yourself and your partner.

If you want to give this a try, start right after you deposit your next paycheck. How much should you pay yourself? It’ll probably take several weeks to figure it out. You’re not trying to put yourself on an austerity program—though if you’re in need of an austerity program, this is a good way to implement it. You want an amount that will cover all of your expenses for the week, but not so much that you’re outspending your income or failing to leave yourself enough to pay your monthly bills.

What about big-ticket items like a new computer or holiday gifts? We save for those, a few dollars a week, over the course of the year.

Too Small to Fail lets you have fun by spending all your money every week. Only you and your helpful robot have to know that you’re being fiscally responsible at the same time.

Matthew Amster-Burton, author of the book Hungry Monkey, writes on food and finance from his home in Seattle.

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Text donations raise $7M for Red Cross Haiti effort

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

This is truly remarkable!!

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Donations via text message raised $7 million for the American Red Cross’s Haiti relief efforts as of 11 p.m. Thursday.

Soon after a 7.0-magnitude quake struck near capital city Port-au-Prince late Tuesday, the Red Cross mobilized fundraising efforts via social networking site Twitter. Just before midnight, @RedCross tweeted: “You can text “HAITI” to 90999 to donate $10 to Red Cross relief efforts in #haiti.”

And so far a staggering 700,000 customers have done just that, across all wireless networks including AT&T (T, Fortune 500), Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500), Sprint (S, Fortune 500) and T-Mobile.

“These are donors who are typically the hardest to reach: young people,” said Verizon Wireless spokesman Jeffrey Nelson. “They’re reacting to something that affects them and realizing their few dollars can make a difference. Texting has opened up a whole new world for philanthropy.”

Mobile giving isn’t new, but it’s been in the spotlight since the Haiti earthquake hit. In fact, the $5 million that’s been raised so far by the Red Cross far exceeds the nearly $4 million that was donated to all charities by mobile texts in all of 2009, Nelson said.

Organizations including the ASPCA, Feed the Children and World Land Trust all have 5-digit numbers to which subscribers can text donations at any time.

Nelson said Verizon Wireless (VZ, Fortune 500) has a long-standing policy that it does not charge subscribers for texts to make charitable donations, and added that 100% of the donated funds are passed on to the Red Cross. T-Mobile also said its subscribers can text Haiti donations for free.

News reports earlier Thursday said AT&T (T, Fortune 500) was charging subscribers for their texts. But a spokesman said Thursday afternoon that the company had updated its systems in the morning to make texts sent to Haiti relief efforts free of charge, and that the change would cover those who donated yesterday.

On Thursday afternoon Sprint said it will continue to treat donation texts “like any other text message for now,” but by that evening the company did an about face and said it would issue a waiver on text message fees for specific Haiti mobile giving donations.

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Will It Pass? Health Care Bill at Risk

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Democrats are Working on Merging House, Senate Bills in Tough Race to Finish Line

Democrats are near the finish line on health care legislation but they have yet to overcome one of the biggest hurdles — merging the Senate and House bills together. The Senate and House discuss compromises on the different versions of the bill.

Although Congress is officially still in recession, key lawmakers are actively involved in intense negotiations to merge the two different bills that, while similar, have some important differences between them.

Experts say Congress is likely to pass the health care bill, but the political ramifications remain to be seen.

“I think that still the sense is, if this fails, it would be worse for them politically than if it passes and I think that’s a calculation across the Democratic party,” Democratic strategist James Carville said on “Good Morning America” today. “My sense is it’s still going to pass it at some point.”

Republicans say the health care bill — and the lack of bipartisanship involved — could kill support from independents, a key voter group in the last presidential election.

“The problems with the health care bill that used to exist only on the right are now affecting the thoughts of the independent voters,” Republican strategist Nicole Wallace said on “GMA.” “We have to wait and watch and see. … I think it will probably pass but I think they will do something that’s even uglier than limping across the finish line.”

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The Recession is over right? Depends how much money you make…

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

The Recession…..

Some people say its over, some people say the worst is yet upon us, and some people have no clue!

How do you feel about it? Do you have a job….well maybe you are feeling better about the recession considering you have an income while others are feeling negative due to the lack of income…

The Facts…..

There are many people making lots of money in this so called recession. You think Facebook or Apple are hurting? Think again….About a year ago Apple’s stock was close to 90 dollars, today its trading around 220! I’d like to call this time frame “The Selective Recession” as some folks out there have lost everything in the Bernie Madoff ponzi scheme and others in Standford which they have nothing to show now.

The Economic paradigm is shifting drastically! Where is the shifting going you ask…no one knows for sure but I can tell you this 15 years ago a college degree would get you in many top level executive positions nowadays it may only get you to the next level of education. In today’s day many corporations are economically constrained to being more efficient and are over working their current employees to the point of fatigue (not a healthy corporate environment)….I believe the shift is about you.

We created this shift. Today the world is smaller due to this little thing called the “Internet“! Why go into a store and buy a camera when you can get it cheaper online? OOPS…there goes the local electronic store…You can take this same model in many industries as you will find the same results. Are we hurting ourselves? NO! The money is going to those who reinvent themselves and follow their brand engagement online thus the online retailers….I consider everyone that is online an “Online retailer” as you are either selling your brand/service to someone or you are selling a product.

The internet is changing how we do everything! If you know nothing of health insurance where do you go for info? Google? Yahoo? or Bing?…..why didn’t you go to yellow pages that is probably sitting in your house somewhere collecting dust. My point exactly…things are shifting, we created the shift now we have to learn to deal with it in our own selective recessions. Protecting and ensuring you have a steady financial growth please reach out to your local advisor, if you don’t have one please let us have the pleasure. As we head in to interesting financial times make sure you protect your financial harvest for you and your family.

Yours Truly,

James Rivera

MyHarvestField.com

 

 

 

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