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Table of Contents
March 2004
Issue Home
7 S-E-C-R-E-T-S to a Great Life!
Free Credit Reports
Common Mistakes During the Job Search Process
Positive Parenting
Financial Independence
Encore Question:
FSS Spotlight:
FSS Trivia Challenge
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Encore Question: What Should I Do With My
Tax Refund Check?
According to the Internal Revenue Service, refund amounts this
year are averaging $2,292. That's slightly more than the
typical $2,091 refund filers got back last year.
Each February or March, I start to think about offering some
bit of wisdom regarding the tax refund subject. I searched and
scoured the Internet looking for just the right bit of advice
and came up empty. Therefore, I have decided to take another
road by just writing something myself.
I hope that our FSS clients take advantage of what I have to
offer in this column. Here goes:
- Save – Yes it’s a four letter word but the most
important four letter word in our financial vocabulary. Does
“rainy day” fund have meaning to anyone? Take that refund
money and stash it away. This year, the unexpected will
happen like it does every year. Your car will break down,
you could face a job lay-off, unexpected medical bills may
arise, the kids will need money for camp. These things
happen, you know they do, why not be prepared next time?
Sure, you can go blow all the money on a fantastic stereo
system or a big screen TV, buy the kids neat new toys,
yourself a newer car or whatever shopping spree you have in
mind. Then the money will be gone. Emergencies will arise
and you’ll be looking to borrow the money somewhere or
charging them on your already overused credit card. Why not
avoid all that hassle and be prepared. Wouldn’t a cushion to
meet these expenses provide you with peace of mind? Have
valuable is that? Is that more important to you than that
fancy newfangled item that you just have to have? It should
be!
Recently I spoke with an FSS client on this very subject.
She admitted that when this “big check” came back to her,
that she just couldn’t help herself. She just had to go
shopping for her and her daughter. She was entitled! I then
asked her to tell me what the money was spent on last refund
season and how valuable those items were to her now. I think
you can guess what the answer was. Why don’t you try asking
this question of yourself before spending this year’s
refund.
- Pay down debt. If you're not paying your debts in full
and on time then you're likely spending more on your bills
than you would make through most investments. Consider
credit cards, for example. Most come with double-digit
interest rates, so making minimum payments is a sure-fire
way to derail your finances and put you in debt for years or
even decades.
Consider, for example, a $3,000 credit card balance with a
15 percent interest rate. If you pay just $50 a month, it
will take you 26 years and six months to be debt-free and
your total interest will have cost you $6,030.
If you were to you get a fat $1,000 tax refund, you could
instead shave that balance to $2,000. If you continue making
monthly $50 payments, you'd be debt-free in 10 years and six
months and interest payments would total just $1,437. That's
a savings of nearly $4,600.
Apply a more modest refund to that debt -- say $500 -- and
you'd still pay off your plastic 10 years early, cutting
your interest by more than half, to $2,917.
- Save to buy a home. Stash some of the money in an
account that can help you to purchase your own home someday.
Did you know that homeowners accumulate significantly more
wealth over their lifetime than renters? It’s true! And most
of that wealth comes from equity in their homes obtained by
making their house payments. Now that TMHA is operating a
Section 8 Homeownership Program, ownership could come sooner
than you think. One of the things required to make
homeownership happen for you is down payment funds that
clients must bring to the table. Many people miss the
opportunity to obtain these funds simply by letting this tax
refund money slip through their fingers each and every year.
- If you haven’t started a retirement account, why not
take some of the money and set it aside for that. Especially
if you do not have any type of retirement benefits from your
work. Most of us do not want to work all of our lives.
Should you be interested in pursuing this option, you can
contact Marty at the TMHA office for assistance.
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