1 / 18

Unit 2 Personal Finance

Unit 2 Personal Finance. At the end of this unit, students should be able to:. On completion of this unit, students will be able to: Understand the difference between cash and credit. Describe the term debt Define the term borrowing and differentiate the different categories.

maude
Download Presentation

Unit 2 Personal Finance

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. Unit 2Personal Finance

  2. At the end of this unit, students should be able to: • On completion of this unit, students will be able to: • Understand the difference between cash and credit. • Describe the term debt • Define the term borrowing and differentiate the different categories. • Compare credit union loans to other financial institutions loans Unit 2

  3. What is Personal Finance? “Personal finance is the application of the principles of finance to the day to day decisions of an individual or family unit as regards money…” Unit 2

  4. Cash v Credit Cash is used immediately to make payment for goods and services but credit is a promise of future payment Credit Unions and Other Financial Institutions were set up to provide credit but Credit Unions were initially set up to help people, who could not get credit from banks. “Buy now pay later” * Worksheet on advantages and disadvantages of credit Unit 2

  5. Debt • Debt can be defined as the amount of money a person owes to someone else. • Poor management of credit can lead to unsustainable debt • When the Celtic Tiger was here it was easier to obtain credit but if your financial situation changes, problems arise where repayments are not met! Unit 2

  6. How to avoid Debt? • Create a cash budget for planning and controlling finance • Always seek advice before borrowing Unit 3

  7. How to avoid Debt? • Decide whether it is a need or want • Make sure you can meet repayments • Shop around for the best options Unit 2

  8. Borrowing Before borrowing, consider a number of factors: • Is it a need or want? • Do I require it immediately or can I save for it? Unit 3

  9. Borrowing • If I need to borrow, how much and can I meet the repayments? • Shop around with other financial institutions and see how flexible they are Unit 2

  10. Terms of loans Short Term: 0 - 1 year, e.g. holiday Medium Term: 1-5 years, e.g. car Long Term: 5 + years, e.g. mortgage Unit 2

  11. Which Term of Loan? When choosing a loan decide: • How long will it take to repay the loan, the longer you take, the more interest you pay! • What interest rate is being charged? Unit 3

  12. Which Term of Loan?(continued) • Terms and conditions of loan? • Does lender require savings, a guarantor or other form or security as collateral? • What is the full cost of borrowing over the term? • Consider forms of Collateral ? Unit 2

  13. Borrowing Options • Personal Loan - bank or credit union • Hire Purchase - watch out for hidden charges • Credit Card - very high interest if not repaid promptly • In-store credit – very high interest rate after interest free period is over • Moneylenders – very high rates Unit 3

  14. Credit Check • When someone applies for a loan, creditors often run a credit check • Gives the lender a full picture of person’s credit history, good or bad • When you apply for credit, you give the creditor permission to send information on you to a credit reference agency. • This information forms part of your credit history

  15. Irish Credit Bureau (ICB) • The ICB is biggest credit referencing • An electronic library of performance of credit agreements • Information stored on borrowers • Name, Address, Date of Birth • History of loans applied for / taken • History of loan repayments • A Credit Bureau Score • A record of any legal action

  16. Golden Rules of Credit • Only borrow what you can comfortably afford to repay • Think about the unexpected • Match short with short • Protect your credit rating/ ability to borrow • Avoid high cost credit options • Take responsibility • Pay off high interest sources first

  17. Financial Planning Unit 2

  18. What do need money for? • - To purchase items • - To have fun! • - To socialise with friends and family • - To go on holidays, travel • - Independence - • - To pay bills • - To be responsible for my money • - To be able to give some money to charity • - Savings • - To plan for the future – pensions, retirement • - To help pay my way at home • - To get what I want – travel • - To be able to own my own home • - To plan for the future – pensions and retirement Unit 3

More Related