UNDERSTANDING THE FINANCIAL PLANNING PROCESS



Similar documents
College of Business Administration Savannah State University Personal Finance (BUSA 3000) Quiz 1 Fall 2011 Dr. William A. Dowling.

TEXAS CORRELATION OF STANDARDS WITH

Economics. Social Studies Curriculum Framework. Revised 2006 Amended June 2009

To the Student: After your registration is complete and your proctor has been approved, you may take the Credit by Examination for MONEY 1A.

Chapter 01. The Financial Planning Process. Chapter 1 Learning Objectives. Personal Finance Basics and the Time Value of Money

Texas Correlations CEV Pathway: Money Matters

9.1 PERSONAL FINANCIAL LITERACY

Chapter 21: Savings Models

and the Time Value of Money

Completed by. Date. Personal Viewpoint

Chapter 18. MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition

Intermediate Savings Goals Prior to Retirement White Paper on Retirement, November 2014 Richard C Marston, Wharton School

18. Interest on savings is calculated by multiplying the money amount times the opportunity cost times the annual interest rate. True False 19.

2. With an MPS of.4, the MPC will be: A) 1.0 minus.4. B).4 minus 1.0. C) the reciprocal of the MPS. D).4. Answer: A

and the Time Value of Money

FBLA: ECONOMICS. Competency: Basic Economic Concepts and Principles

National Standards for Personal Finance Education - Jump $tart Correlation to Virtual Business - Personal Finance

Chapter 22: Borrowings Models

Goals-Based Wealth Management

Economics Unit 6 Let s Make It Personal

Chapter 1 Personal Financial Planning The Money Plan

CITY UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF CITY UNIVERSITY. Information on a General Education Course

Investment Policy Questionnaire

Lars Osberg. Department of Economics Dalhousie University 6214 University Avenue Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3J5 CANADA

Commercial Real Estate Investment: Opportunities for Income Generation in Today s Environment

Chapter 18 of Blink and Dorton s IB Course Companion for Economics Section 3.4 of Matt McGee s Economics in Terms of the Good, the Bad and the

HOW TO SAVE FOR YOUR FUTURE. a guide for financial security

Chapter 113. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Social Studies. Subchapter C. High School

MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF VARIOUS PROPOSALS TO PROVIDE $500 BILLION IN TAX RELIEF

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

PART PLANNING YOUR PERSONAL FINANCES CHAPTER 1 CHAPTER 2 CHAPTER 3. Personal Financial Planning: An Introduction

How Much Life Insurance Do I Need?

Personal Finance: An Integrated Planning Approach, 8e (Frasca) Chapter 1 Financial Planning: Why It's Important To You

Understand the relationship between financial plans and statements.

Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy. Goodheart-Willcox Foundations of Personal Finance 2014 by Sally Campbell and Robert Dansby

Planning for the Stages of Retirement

Keynesian Economics I. The Keynesian System (I): The Role of Aggregate Demand

Notes - Gruber, Public Finance Chapter 13 - Social Security Social Security started in 1935 in Great Depression. Asset values had fallen drastically,

Guaranteed to Fit Your Life

Academy of Finance I G/T

WEALTH CARE KIT SM. A consumer s guide to establishing and maintaining a financial wellness plan.

National Small Business Network

2.If actual investment is greater than planned investment, inventories increase more than planned. TRUE.

Pre- and Post-Test for The Great Depression Curriculum Answer Key

Preparing for Your Retirement: An IRA Review

WHITE PAPER: How to Tackle Industry Challenges?

Macroeconomic Patterns and Stories

The Performance Management Process How to establish goals, objectives and KPI s

Procedure: Adapted by the Maryland Council on Economic Education 1

Life Cycle of Financial Planning Note-Taking Guide

Best Practices in Retirement Planning

out of control little-used clinical assets are draining healthcare budgets

Learning Objectives 26. What Is Insurance? 3. Coverage Concepts 8. Types of Insurance 10. Types of Insurers 11. Introduction 26

Answers. Event: a tax cut 1. affects C, AD curve 2. shifts AD right 3. SR eq m at point B. P and Y higher, unemp lower 4.

GFL Comparison SB 40, New Standards, Old Standards

Lecture 11: Inflation: Its Causes and Costs. Rob Godby University of Wyoming

Potential GDP and Economic Growth

Miami Dade College ECO Principles of Macroeconomics - Fall 2014 Practice Test #2

How To Understand The Economic And Social Costs Of Living In Australia

Money Management Test - MoneyPower

The Charitable Remainder Trust & Charitable Lead Trust. Presented by: Jeffery T. Peetz Woods & Aitken LLP

SMART Financial Goals

Youth Career Development

Indiana Financial Education Standards Final December 2008

Creating a Sustainable Rewards and Talent Management Model:

The CAO s Experience in Auditing Public Debt

CHAPTER 2: THE MARKET SYSTEM AND THE CIRCULAR FLOW

AS Economics. Introductory Macroeconomics. Sixth Form pre-reading

S.Y.B.COM. (SEM-III) ECONOMICS

Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and the Self-Correcting Economy

10 Steps to Financial Freedom in Your Twenties and Thirties

Chapter 13. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis

AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

Out of Control. How clinical asset proliferation and low utilization are draining healthcare budgets. GE Healthcare

CITY OF GUNNISON EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL FORM 2013

Asset Management Plan

A research study issued by the ASX and Russell Investments. Investing Report FULL REPORT / JUNE 2012

CITY OF PORT ST LUCIE FINANCIAL POLICY CAPITAL ASSETS

Part 610 Natural Resource Economics Handbook

Welcome. Sincerely, Tim & Nichole Gardner Financial Planning

SALES FORCE MOTIVATION AND COMPENSATION

Coggin College of Business Accounting & Finance Course Descriptions

LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES

A BRIEF HISTORY OF BRAZIL S GROWTH

Transcription:

UNDERSTANDING THE FINANCIAL PLANNING PROCESS

1-2 The Rewards of Sound Financial Planning Maintain and improve standard of living. Control spending in order to live well today and tomorrow! Accumulate wealth.

1-3 Average Propensity to Consume: The percentage of each dollar of income that is spent, on average, for current needs rather than saved. What is your average propensity to consume? Income spent on current needs Total income

1-4 The Personal Financial Planning Process Taking conscientious and systematic steps toward fulfilling your financial goals.

1-5 Steps in the Financial Planning Process: 1. Define financial goals. 2. Develop financial plans and strategies to achieve goals. 3. Implement financial plans and strategies. 4. Develop budgets to monitor and control progress toward goals. 5. Evaluate results by using financial statements. 6. Revise goals as situations change.

1-6 1. Define financial goals 2. Develop plans

1-7 1. Define financial goals 2. Develop plans 3. Implement plans 4. Develop budgets FINANCIAL ACTIONS Basic asset decisions Credit decisions Insurance decisions Investment decisions Retirement and estate decisions

1-8 1. Define financial goals 2. Develop plans Prepare financial statements 5. Evaluate results 3. Implement plans 4. Develop budgets FINANCIAL ACTIONS Basic asset decisions Credit decisions Insurance decisions Investment decisions Retirement and estate decisions 6. Revise plans

1-9 Money: Used as a medium of exchange. Financial goals are stated in dollar amounts. Need to consider utility, or amount of satisfaction derived from purchases, as well as cost. May be closely linked to personal psychological concepts. May play key role in personal relationships.

1-10 To attain your financial goals: Be specific in defining goals and focus on results. Make goals realistically attainable. Involve family members and enlist their cooperation. Prioritize goals and set a definite time frame.

1-11 Putting target dates on financial goals: Short-term goals to be accomplished within the next year. Intermediate-term goals to be accomplished in the next 2-5 years. Long-term goals to be accomplished in time periods greater than 5 years.

1-12 From Goals to Plans: A Lifetime of Planning Early childhood High school and college Family formation Career development Pre-retirement Retirement

Personal Financial Planning Lifecycle Income 1-13 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Age Income Stream Tax Retirement/ Estate Benefits Savings/ Investmen Liability/Insurance t Asset Acquisition

1-14 Benefit of planning: Your money works more efficiently for you by... Utilizing the financial wonder The power of compounding through time!

Growth of $1,000 at 8 % interest: $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 1-15 $20,000 $10,000 $0 2,159 4,661 10,063 Years 0 10 20 30 40 21,725

Growth of $1000 at 10% interest: 1-16 $50,000 $40,000 45,259 $30,000 $20,000 17,449 21,725 $10,000 2,594 6,727 $0 Years 0 10 20 30 40

Use the personal computer to: Prepare financial statements Plan retirement Prepare and file tax returns Track investments Analyze needs 1-17

1-18 The Planning Environment Financial planning is carried out in an economic environment created by the interactions of Government Business Consumers

Money payments of wages, rents interest, and profit 1-19 BUSINESS GOVERNMENT CONSUMERS Money payments for goods and services

Money payments of wages, rents interest, and profit 1-20 Land, labor, and financial capital BUSINESS GOVERNMENT CONSUMERS Goods and services Money payments for goods and services

Money payments of wages, rents interest, and profit 1-21 Land, labor, and financial capital Public goods & services, regulations, and revenues BUSINESS GOVERNMENT CONSUMERS Taxes Goods and services Money payments for goods and services

1-22 Government policy decisions are used to regulate the economy in an effort to: Provide economic stability Maintain acceptable employment levels

1-23 Monetary Policy Controls money supply Used to stimulate or contract economic growth Fiscal Policy Controls levels of taxation Sets levels of government spending on various programs

Policies seek to control: Economic Cycles Stages related to employment and production levels Growth measured by changes in GDP 1-24 Inflation Measured by changes in CPI Affects purchasing power and interest rates Affects financial plans and goals

1-25 Economic Cycles Levels of Employment and Production HIGH LOW Expansion Recessio n Depression Recovery

1-26 What Determines Your Personal Income? Age, marital status Education Where you live Career choice

THE END!