1 / 15

Money

Money. A presentation by Student Fiscal Services University of Washington. Data from the Census Bureau show that people with higher education levels earn more money over a lifetime…. Education Pays Off. Less than high school High school Some college Associate’s Bachelor’s Master’s

afya
Download Presentation

Money

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Money A presentation by Student Fiscal Services University of Washington

  2. Data from the Census Bureau show that people with higher education levels earn more money over a lifetime… Education Pays Off Less than high school High school Some college Associate’s Bachelor’s Master’s Doctoral Professional E$1.0m EE$1.2m EEE$1.5m EEEE$1.6m EEEEE$2.1m EEEEEE$2.5m EEEEEEE$3.4m EEEEEEEE$4.4m

  3. Value of $1 If you save $1 per day from your 18th birthday until your 65th birthday and the money earns 2% in a savings account, how much will you have saved? $28,038.27

  4. What is a Budget? Not running out of money before you run out of month

  5. FOOD STEAK VS. HAMBURGERS NEEDS VS. WANTS CLOTHING NIKE VS. PAYLESS APARTMENTS VS. DORMITORY SHELTER

  6. How do you decide how to spend or save your money?

  7. If your money is going toward something you value, then you will usually feel a sense of satisfaction and accomplishment.

  8. But if your money is going toward something you do not value, then youwill usually experience a sense of frustration and failure.

  9. Your Credit Report Your credit report is similar to a transcript and will reflect your credit history A credit rating/score is a numerical value assigned to you based on your credit history Low credit scores can affect your ability to buy a home or car, or even get a cell phone

  10. Your Credit Report Could Contain • Personal Information • Full name & other names used • Addresses for the last 7 years • Employer name • Social security number • Home phone number • Inquiries • Tradelines • creditor acct/date open/high bal/pymt terms/curr bal/ status/pastdue • Charge offs • Court-appointed restitution • Unpaid child support • Bankruptcy • And more • Tax liens • Unpaid parking tickets • or moving violations • Evictions • Car repossessions • Bad checks

  11. FRAUD • Identity theft • Use of another person’s name and SSN to obtain new credit • Account take-over • Use of person’s existing accounts • Application fraud • Fictitious identity to obtain new credit

  12. Credit Cards There are advantages…. • Good to have in the event of an emergency • Establish your own credit history • Offer insurance and replacement incentives for purchases • Safer than carrying large amounts of cash if your wallet is ever stolen • Many have air miles or other reward programs But beware…

  13. Beware Of Fine Print • Membership Fees: $59.00 annual fee • One-time processing fee: $49.00 plus • Annual Percentage Rate: 23.99% • Grace Period: 20-25 days (if previous month’s balance was paid in full) • Fee for cash advance: 5% (min $3) • Returned check fee: $25.00 • Late Payment Fee: $25.00 • Over-the-Credit-Limit: $25.00

  14. TRAPS! • Credit Cards • Payday Loans • “Floating” Checks • NSF • Other Fees • Emergency Loans • Second Mortgage • Family or Friends • U.W.

  15. Want to Learn More? To sign up for Money 101, send an email to: sfscust@u.washington.edu

More Related