Planning for your financial future can be an enlightening and rewarding experience at any age. Like anything worthwhile though, it’s not always an easy process.
As a Certified Financial Planner who helps people with retirement planning every day, I see mistakes repeated by all age groups and wealth levels. If you become aware of the following common errors in retirement planning, it’s my hope that you will be able to avoid repeating them:
Were you following this:
Reeves: Pay raise for teachers, no new money for prisons
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves has released his budget proposal that includes pay raises for teachers and no additional money for the troubled state prison system.
Reeves is recommending a $1,500 salary bump for teachers during the coming school year. That's $500 more than a proposal being considered by the state Senate.
Reeves' pay recommendation is part of his proposed state budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1. In the plan released Friday, Reeves recommends that the state spend the same amount on the Department of Corrections in the coming year as in the current year.
Indians SS Francisco Lindor isn't ... but he does know his value
CLEVELAND — Cleveland Indians shortstop Francisco Lindor was one of many players who made an appearance at the eighth annual Tribe Fest Saturday, but could this have been his last? Lindor answered questions about his future and Cleveland, which is still undecided.
Waiting for the right offer
Lindor said he doesn't spend a lot of time worrying about the trade rumors that have surrounded him, and simply focuses on the fact he still wears an Indians jersey for the time being.
How the Royals get their money
Harry and Meghan's defection has put a spotlight on the finances and inner workings of Britain's royal family. Here's everything you need to know:
How rich are the Windsors?
Very. The bulk of the money that supports the House of Windsor — sometimes called The Firm — flows through the reigning monarch, Queen Elizabeth II. She has three sources of income. First, she receives an annual payout of taxpayer money called the Sovereign Grant, which last year yielded $107 million.
Not to change the topic here:
Opinion | More Money, More Problems for Democracy - The New York Times
There is a straight line from the Supreme Court's 2010 decision in the Citizens United case to a dinner party the president attended at the Trump International Hotel in Washington in April 2018.
The dinner has attracted attention because Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman — associates of President Trump's personal lawyer Rudolph Giuliani — took the opportunity to press Mr. Trump to remove Marie Yovanovitch as the American ambassador to Ukraine as part of a plan to make money from natural gas. That, in turn, is part of the larger saga that has resulted in Mr. Trump's impeachment for his later efforts to compel Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden.
'Show Me The Money' event aims to teach financial literacy | WEYI
Retirees' top money regrets
About 1 out of 3 Social Security recipients apply for benefits at the earliest age, which is 62. It's often a mistake. Daily Herald File Photo
Now we'll cover the money moves retirees wish they hadn't made. The big ones, of course, are starting to save too late and not saving enough, but there are other common regrets, according to certified financial planners from the Financial Planning Association and the Alliance of Comprehensive Planners.
Happening on Twitter
I vote to secede. How about that. I live in New York and I'm pretty sure Canada would take us. Jersey can come too.… https://t.co/e1iZeSU2W2 ElieNYC (from NYC) Fri Jan 31 03:38:44 +0000 2020
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