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Ponce
6th August 2010, 07:14 PM
I don't get it, why do they need so much money for retirement?.......I mean, with my Social Security alone and with no debts I have twice more than what I need to live with.......unless they are going to live like king and queens AND help to support their brats.
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Five expenses That Will Consume 50 Percent of Your Lifetime Earning.

In these recessionary times, financial tips are flowing fast and furious about how to save money and stick to a budget. Facing a sea of information many people are asking, "Where do I start?" For most of us, five areas of spending will consume over 50% of the money we earn during our lifetime, so that's the best place to begin.

The five areas are: Home, car, children, education and retirement. Here's what you need to know about each:

[Click here to check savings products and rates in your area.]

• Don't bite off more HOME than you can chew. How much house can you comfortably afford? For most people the answer is a house with a purchase price of no more than 3x their annual household income. Rationale: the cost of a home includes much more than the monthly mortgage payment. It's also property tax, insurance, upkeep, etc. Typically these costs run 2%-3% of the price of your home each year. Assuming a 20% down payment, a 30-year fixed rate mortgage, and interests rates in the 5%-6% rate, the 3x your income rule of thumb will translate into total housing costs of roughly 30% of your gross income.

• Don't let your CAR drive you to the poor house. The same logic applies to your car. Most people can comfortably afford a car that is 1/3rd of their annual income. If you make $60,000 you can comfortably afford a car that costs $20,000. If that seems low — now you know why so many Americans are in financial trouble. They are driving it. A car has many other costs than simply the monthly payment. There's insurance, gas, parking, maintenance, etc. If you follow this rule of thumb, your total transportation costs should be 10% or less of your gross income.

• Don't let your KIDS kick you in the wallet. Kids are expensive. From a purely clinical standpoint the Dept. of Agriculture estimates it will cost $220,000 to raise a child born in 2008 from diapers to age 18. And that figure is before you add in the cost of college! Deciding to be a parent is a major financial obligation. Don't make it worse by over-indulging your love bundles.

• Don't forget to ask "How high is too high for higher EDUCATION?" It used to be good debt was defined as mortgage and student loan debt… and bad debt was everything else. Not any more. We've now learned that too much of a good thing can indeed be bad. Rough rule of thumb, don't take on more in total education debt than you think you are going to earn on average annually during your first 10 years after graduating (from college or grad school). In plain English, if you think you'll make $50,000 a year, don't take out more than $50,000 in loans. The logic behind this is that if it takes you more than 10 years of paying 10% of your income a year in student loan repayments, it's going to be tough to meet your other financial obligations.

• Don't underestimate the need to feed your RETIREMENT nest egg. How much will you need to retire? A simple rule of thumb is to multiply your current income by 25. So if you make $50,000 a year and want to maintain that standard of living in retirement, you'll need a nest egg of at least $1,250,000. Understanding early on in your working life what "your number" is… will help you see just how important it is to plan for this major savings goal.

Yahoo news..............

Still Barbaro
6th August 2010, 07:24 PM
I won't bite off more than I can chew, for I pay with cash, don't have kids, and I think I'll work until I die.

Even though, I haven't worked a regular 40 hour a week job for ten years.

Mouse
6th August 2010, 09:32 PM
One expense that will consume 50 percent of your lifetime earning:

Taxes.

Everything else just screws you out of what's left.

MNeagle
7th August 2010, 06:23 AM
Medical expenses can kill your finances too.

J in AZ
7th August 2010, 10:56 AM
Taxes, insurance, and medical expenses.

Add in all the useless junk they program you to buy on the idiot box and everyone becomes debt slaves.

Ponce
7th August 2010, 11:57 AM
You people should get ready, like I did, in order to retired......first thing that I did was to find a place where I felt that I would feel safe from what is to come and a added benefit was the fact the we don't have local or stated taxes when you buy anything.

Insurance for my two vehicles are of $365.00 every six months for both vehicles, because I own a home I bought the best one that I could get.

Medical cost me (out of pocket) $52.20 a months and is the best that there is.......but for the fact that when I first got it you had to pay for only the first day at a hospital and now if five days..... co-payment is $12.00 per visit...........plus I still have also the VA.......100% free.

Taxes for my home is $465.00 a year and will cover anything and everything.....even God himself.

Out of pocket money that I MUST HAVE is of $4,300 a year that I can cut down to $3,650, if I have to, this does not includes gasoline or food.

Like I said before, I live in Valhalla and with no money worries but only because I plan everything ahead of time.............. "Get ready for tomorrow today, and you wont have any worries ahead"

But of course I don't have a wife or brats to take what I have, and that helps 100%.

MNeagle
7th August 2010, 12:01 PM
But of course I don't have a wife or kids to take care of me (or what I have) when I'm old & feeble, and that hurts too.


:oo-->

Ponce
7th August 2010, 12:13 PM
Is all a state of mind.........I even have a place to go when I reach 100 years.......is a cabin by the sea which includes a maid and services for $1,200 a month.

Plan first your future, in you mind, and then take action on it.........I am now building a bridge, or walkway, between the house and my log cabin........did it first in my mind and now I am building it.

You only have worries if you are not ready.........be ready for all and afraid of none.

Still Barbaro
7th August 2010, 12:31 PM
Taxes, insurance, and medical expenses.

I am going to try to find an average on how much each American (on average) pays out of their (groos & net income) to taxes, insurance, and medical expenses (premiums, and pharmaceutical costs).

Any guesses?

The Fed, State, local and sales taxes can be estimated the pretty easily .

Add insurance and medical expenses and it's a massive chunk of earnings over a lifetime.

MNeagle
7th August 2010, 12:49 PM
Hit by economy, patients can't buy life-saving meds

http://pagingdrgupta.blogs.cnn.com/2010/08/06/hit-by-economy-patients-cant-buy-life-saving-meds/?hpt=Sbin



Cancer drug runs $4,500/month

Gaillo
7th August 2010, 12:51 PM
Is all a state of mind.........I even have a place to go when I reach 100 years.......is a cabin by the sea which includes a maid and services for $1,200 a month.

Plan first your future, in you mind, and then take action on it.........I am now building a bridge, or walkway, between the house and my log cabin........did it first in my mind and now I am building it.

You only have worries if you are not ready.........be ready for all and afraid of none.


"The mind is everything; what you think, you become" - Buddha

TheNocturnalEgyptian
7th August 2010, 02:27 PM
Is all a state of mind.........I even have a place to go when I reach 100 years.......is a cabin by the sea which includes a maid and services for $1,200 a month.

Plan first your future, in you mind, and then take action on it.........I am now building a bridge, or walkway, between the house and my log cabin........did it first in my mind and now I am building it.

You only have worries if you are not ready.........be ready for all and afraid of none.


"The mind is everything; what you think, you become" - Buddha


“The soul becomes dyed with the color of its thoughts.” Marcus Aurelius

Saul Mine
7th August 2010, 07:55 PM
Don't bite off more HOME than you can chew. How much house can you comfortably afford? For most people the answer is a house with a purchase price of no more than 3x their annual household income. Rationale: the cost of a home includes much more than the monthly mortgage payment. It's also property tax, insurance, upkeep, etc. Typically these costs run 2%-3% of the price of your home each year. Assuming a 20% down payment, a 30-year fixed rate mortgage, and interests rates in the 5%-6% rate, the 3x your income rule of thumb will translate into total housing costs of roughly 30% of your gross income.

That first line is of course ignored and forgotten. If you want to buy a house you WILL buy exactly as much as the bank feels like loaning you and if you don't like that you can get lost. It will be somewhat unusual if they let you pick a color. Notice the advice: "3x your income". In the 70s the prudent advice was 2 1/2 x your income. Why the change, especially since people are less wealthy now than then? Before FHA was invented there was no advice: people bought exactly as much house as they needed and could pay for, and it usually required saving for several years even if a mortgage covered part of the price. That was in the days when mothers stayed home all day because fathers made enough to support all the family's needs.

There isn't really much a young fellow can do about this situation. Before FHA it was common for a family to live in a shack on the back of a lot while they built a real house on the front. FHA forces people to live in NICE houses, so they pass laws against neighbors living in shacks. It is a crime not to borrow money and pretend to be as rich as your neighbors!