Tuesday, January 10, 2012

What Kids Should Know About Money and When


Vladimir Godnik / Getty Images


Source :Time :DAN KADLEC :January 9, 2012 | 
VLADIMIR GODNIK / GETTY IMAGES


President Obama and his top financial advisers in November were handed a blueprint for what kids at certain ages should be expected to know about money. The document is still a work in progress. But it’s far enough along to have boiled down thousands of pages of research from a dozen independent sources into 20 simple “money milestones.”


Identifying what kids should know about money, and by what age, is a critical step in the global push to raise personal financial literacy rates. By finding ways to make an impression on young people before they fall into bad habits, we may be able to get them to do things like budget and save as readily as they learn to brush their teeth.




More than a few have taken a stab at a definitive age-based list of money milestones. I took a shot at it here about 18 months ago. The JumpStart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy has its version. You can find other lists here and here.


But the money milestones that Obama and his team—including Alan Krueger, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, and Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council—have in hand attempt to synthesize and simplify the best information out there. As part of her work for the Youth Subcommittee of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability, Beth Kobliner, author of Get a Financial Life, prepared the paper, and when the milestones are finalized a year or so from now and blessed by the White House they will carry a lot of weight with educators and others in the financial education field. (And to my knowledge, this working paper has not previously been reported.)


Here’s how the milestones break down:


Ages 3-5 A child should come to understand that you need money to buy things; you earn money by working; you may have to wait before you can buy what you want; there’s a difference between what you want and what you need.


Ages 6-10 A child should come to understand that you must make choices about how to spend your money; you should shop around for the best deal; it is dangerous and costly to share too much information online; putting your money in a bank account will protect it and earn interest.


Ages 11-13 A child should come to understand that it is smart to save 10% of what you earn; entering credit card or Social Security numbers online puts you at risk of identity theft; the earlier you save the more you’ll have in the long run; a credit card is a loan and you will owe more than you spent if you do not pay your bill in full each month.


Ages 14-18 A teen should come to understand that college is expensive and you should choose a school and student loans based in part on your career expectations; you should avoid using credit cards for things you cannot afford in cash; you pay taxes on your income and should budget for take-home pay, not gross pay; a great place to save and invest is a Roth IRA.


Ages 18 and up A young adult should understand that you should use a credit card only if you can pay off the balance every month; you should never be without health insurance; you should always diversify your investments and pay attention to the costs associated with various investment products.


These milestones are broad and simple by design. They are meant to promote awareness of basic personal finance issues that, perhaps, you take for granted but which generally are found lacking across the population.


Kids who are raised with even cursory knowledge of things like interest expense and fees on financial products will, as adult consumers, know enough to investigate further when necessary. That’s a minimum goal of financial education—and it is the right approach. We can reach higher, too. But loftier financial education goals should not be at the expense of building a solid base. For now, what’s needed is a set of widely accepted guideposts that all interested parties can teach to. Maybe we’ll have it soon.

Billions Wasted: Do Gift Cards Make Sense When So Many Go Unused?

DreamPictures / VStock / Getty Images


Source :Time ;Brad Tuttle : 
 DREAMPICTURES / VSTOCK / GETTY IMAGES


Retailers and restaurants love gift cards—so much so that they load them with bonus cash in order to sell more cards. This makes total sense once you realize how often gift cards aren’t used at all, and how all those cards add up to billions of dollars in profits.

Roughly $2 billion worth of gift cards will go unredeemed this year. That’s the estimate from the TowerGroup, cited recently at Philly.com.

That sounds like an awful lot of money. Until, that is, you realize that the amount in unused gift cards is actually down compared to the peak year, 2007, when approximately 10% of the value of all gift cards went to waste thanks to fees, expiration, and consumers who left them in drawers or otherwise just didn’t use them. All said, $3.5 billion worth of gift cards was unused in 2007.


What’s more, as reported by the Wall Street Journal and NPR, from 2005 to 2011, an absurdly high $41 billion worth of gift cards has likely gone unredeemed.

In the long run, when gift cards go unredeemed, their values are swallowed up by the retailers in question, or, in some instances, go to the states where the card was sold. In 2008, for example, New York state collected $9.6 million in unused gift cards.

By this point, consumers should be aware that gift cards can be a waste of money. In November, a Consumer Reports survey noted that one-quarter of adults still hadn’t used at least one gift card they’d received from the previous holiday season.


Nonetheless, gift cards remain quite popular for holiday season exchanges. In that same CR survey, 62% of those polled said they planned on giving one or more gift cards. Wealthy consumers, who helped boost luxury retail sales over the holidays, said that the gifts they most desired for Christmas were actually gift cards and cash.

Something tells me that nearly all of the cash handed out over the holidays isn’t sitting unused and forgotten in a drawer. As for the gift cards …

Brad Tuttle is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @bradrtuttle.

SBI tax saving deposits—can it really fetch you 17.77% return?




Source :Raj Pradhan : Money control ;9 jan 2012


SBI’s tax saving deposits advertisement claims to give you 17.77% return. While it assumes you are in the 30% Income tax slab at the time of investment, it conveniently calculates the return without considering tax obligation on the interest generated at the time of exit



During the tax savings season, people are desperate to save Rs30,900 in taxes by investing their hard-earned Rs1 lakh in certain kinds of savings instruments. One such avenue is a tax-saving fixed deposit (FD) which is for a five-year term without option for premature withdrawal. SBI has put a front page advertisement in Times of India and other leading national dailies claiming to give 17.77% effective annual yield. It assumes you are in the 30% bracket (which may not be true) and it gives an effective annual yield without considering the tax on the interest generated, which could be up to 30%.


While your effective annual yield will vary based on your tax bracket at entry and exit, SBI’s calculations in the advertisement shows the slick marketing which wants to consider highest possible tax savings on entry and no tax liability on exit. It is misleading to an average investor who can get dazzled by the big returns claimed in the advertisement. 


This kind of advertisement is usually seen with infrastructure bonds giving tax benefit under 80CCF for Rs20,000 investment. Last year, IDFC bond claimed a tax-adjusted yield of up to 17.85% to investors on buyback (after five years for 10-year bond), which was confusing to the average investor. The company was offering 8% return last financial year.


On a positive note, SBI’s rate of interest for tax savings five-year FD is 9.25% per annum (p.a.) which is also the same as it offers for regular FD. In the past, tax savings deposit FD used to offer a little lower rate than the regular FD. With tight liquidity for banks, they want to entice deposits with high interest rates. 


It is important to note that there is no option for premature withdrawal even with penalty for tax savings FD and the interest is taxable. There are other better options for tax savings under 80C. Consider all the options before jumping in with tax savings FD.


SBI has been advertising heavily for attracting big deposits. It is giving 8.5% p.a. interest for deposit of Rs1 crore and above for only seven-day FD. This is a good option for high-net-worth individuals, who want good return as well as liquidity.