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Created by Camille Krum Help! I’m out of money! Personal Finance Personal Finance

Personal Finance

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Page 1: Personal Finance

Created by Camille Krum

Help! I’m out of money!

Personal FinancePersonal Finance

Page 2: Personal Finance

Activity: How Much Do They Make?

Page 3: Personal Finance

Spending CreditEarning

Careers

Income Credit Cards

Expenses

Variable

Fixed Differential

Page 4: Personal Finance

Earning

Careers

Page 5: Personal Finance

Learn and Earn

High School Degree

Associate Degree

Bachelor Degree

Masters Degree

Doctorate Degree

$18,571 $26,536 $40,387 $48,872 $60,729

How Education Pays: For the Rest of Your Life

Page 6: Personal Finance

How much is your time worth?

Salary Year Salary Week

Benefits=40%

Total Salary

Total Week Value Per Hour

Value Per Minute

$15,000 $288.46 $115.38 $403.84 $10.10 $0.17

$20,000 $384.62 $153.85 $538.47 $13.46 $0.22

$25,500 $480.77 $192.31 $673.08 $16.83 $0.28

$30,000 $576.92 $230.77 $807.69 $20.19 $0.34

$40,000 $769.23 $307.69 $1,076.92 $26.92 $0.45

$50,000 $961.54 $384.62 $1,346.16 $33.65 $0.56

$60,000 $1,153.85 $461.54 $1615.39 $40.38 $0.67

$70,000 $1,346.15 $538.46 $1,884.61 $47.12 $0.79

$80,000 $1,538.46 $1,884.61 $2,153.84 $53.85 $0.90

$90,000 $1,730.77 $692.31 $2,423.08 $60.58 $1.01

Page 7: Personal Finance

•The average earnings of college graduates in 1996 were 55% higher than those of high school graduates.

•The average income for a family headed by a high school graduate declined 4.5% between 1973 and 1996.

•During that same time (1973-1996), the income of families headed by college graduates grew 13.8%.

•During that same time, the earnings of families headed by a parent who went to school beyond a college degree rose 38.8%.

Earnings

Page 8: Personal Finance

Activity

Do you get tired of going to class every day? Complete the assignment and see what the value of a day’s education is over a 40-year work life. How much is attending each class really worth?

How Much is Class Attendance Worth?

Page 9: Personal Finance

Millionaire Game

Hold up a true or false card. Include a Millionaire Card if you are sure your are correct.

1. Most Millionaires are college graduates.

2. Most millionaires work fewer than 40 hours a week.

3. More than half of all millionaires never received money from a trust fund or estate.

Page 10: Personal Finance

Millionaire Game

4. More millionaires have American Express Gold Cards than Sears cards.

5. More millionaires drive Fords than Cadillac's.

6. Most millionaires work in glamorous jobs, such as sports, entertainment, or high tech.

7. Most millionaires work for big Fortune 500 companies.

8. Many poor people become millionaires by winning the lottery.

Page 11: Personal Finance

Millionaire Game9. College graduates earn about 65 perce

nt more than high school graduates.

10. If an average 18-year-old high school graduate spends as much as an average high school dropout until both are 67 years old, but the high school graduate invests the difference in his or her earnings at eight percent annual interest, the high school graduate would have $5,500,000.

Page 12: Personal Finance

Millionaire Game

11. Day traders usually beat the stock market and many of them become millionaires.

12. If you want to be a millionaire, avoid the risk stock market.

13. At age 18, you decide not to by fountain drinks and save $1.50 a day. You invest the $1.50 a day at eight percent annual interest until you are 67. At age 67, your savings from not drinking soda are almost $300,000.

Page 13: Personal Finance

Millionaire Game

14. If You save $2,000 a year from age 22 to age 65 at eight percent annual interest, your savings will be over $700,000 at age 65.

15.Single people are more often millionaires than married people.

Page 14: Personal Finance

Spending

Income

Expenses

Variable

Fixed Differential

Page 15: Personal Finance

Lifestyle costs

• Where you live• Clothes• Food• Transportation• Entertainment• Vacations• Other costs-car repairs

insurance

Page 16: Personal Finance

Reality Check

Take the reality check quiz online to see what your life style choice requires you to earn per hour.

URL:http://www.jumpstart.org/madmoney/pgv_money_rc_main.html

Page 17: Personal Finance

Activity: Cookie Monster• Select student to be employee

• Select student to be State Tax collector

• Select student to be Social Security Tax collector

• Select student to be Federal Tax collector

• Select student to be Health Insurance collector

• Select student to be Life Insurance collector

• Select student to be Donation collector

Page 18: Personal Finance

REALITY BITES

Do you know where your money goes?

Identify your spending traps—

For the next two days keep a spending log. Record everything you spend.

Page 19: Personal Finance

Financial GoalsShort term goal—pay for

immediate needs such as school, entertainment, clothes, etc.

Medium term goal—college education, cars, vacation.

Long term goal—retirement plans, change in career, travel

Page 20: Personal Finance

Activity: Road Map to Spending

• Divide into groups of three. In two minutes list as many items as they can in the following categories:

• Fixed Expenses• Variable Expenses• Differential Expenses• Each student completes A Road

Map For Spending

Page 21: Personal Finance

BudgetGo to computers in groups of three—if

not enough computers for all students.

Go to web site

and select career and salary from list.

Go to “Where does your salary go” and complete the activity.

Page 22: Personal Finance

Credit

Credit Cards

Page 23: Personal Finance

Three C’s of Credit

• Character—borrower’s willingness to pay you based on past history paying back loans

• Capability—ability to pay back money borrowed

• Collateral—property used to cover amount owed if fail to pay back money– Group students to do scenarios

Page 24: Personal Finance

A Credit Check

Perhaps you have not developed a personal credit history, but you do have a personal education performance history that reflects similar behavior patterns. On a piece of paper, answer the following questions:

1. Number of times you have missed class this semester.

2. Number of times you have been tardy this semester.

3. How many times have you turned in late assignments this semester.

Page 25: Personal Finance

4. How many times have you turned in incomplete assignments this semester?

5. How many times have you not turned in an assignment at all this semester?

6. How many times have you been asked by the teacher to change or improve your behavior in class this semester?

7. How many times have you forgotten to bring the required materials (pencil, disk, notebook, etc.) to class this semester?

Page 26: Personal Finance

TOTAL (Add the numbers listed for 1-7 above)

How did you do?

4 or less…………… Credit Granted!!

5o-7 ……………… You are going to need a cosigner

8 or more………… CREDIT DENIED!

Page 27: Personal Finance

FALSE

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TRUE

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FALSE

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TRUE

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FALSE

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TRUE

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FALSE

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TRUE

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FALSE

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TRUE

Page 37: Personal Finance

Credits and Referencs

www.themint.org

www.jumpstartcoalition.org