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| Making the Most of Your Money | 
enlarge | Author: Jane Bryant Quinn Publisher: Simon & Schuster Category: Book
List Price: $30.00 Buy New: $0.01 You Save: $29.99 (100%)
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (188 reviews) Sales Rank: 138872
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Edition: Rev Upd Su Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 1072 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 6.5 x 2
ISBN: 0684811766 Dewey Decimal Number: 332.02401 EAN: 9780684811765 ASIN: 0684811766
Publication Date: November 11, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
This classic book of solid and practical financial advice has been completely refocused to address new tax laws, new ways of paying for higher education, new forms of health insurance, and the completely new investment climate. As a financial planning tool, the original Making the Most of Your Money predicted a change in America's priorities?away from an obsession with spending and toward a desire to save and invest. The book also foresaw an environment dominated by falling inflation and interest rates. That call was right on the money. The new edition sees yet another shift in financial energies -- a fresh round of serious borrowing, as the boomers start sending kids to college; a desire to save for retirement fast; and an obsession with keeping safe the profits that have already been made. Investing is getting more complex, as more financial products and services come to market and as traditional guideposts change. More than ever, investors need a clear path through the undergrowth. The new Making the Most of Your Money is that path. It presents a new blueprint for twenty-first-century success. On investing: The markets will surprise you. Serious investors need a better understanding of asset allocation and how to diversify for global gains while minimizing risk. The new edition presents a variety of investment mixes for different purposes. You'll also find a sophisticated guide to picking superior mutual funds. On paying for college: The entire federal financial-aid program has been overhauled. Much more money is available to middle-class families, making paying for college the art of the possible. This book takes you through all the money sources. On buying a home: The percentage of Americans owning their own homes is on an upswing. That's because mortgage lenders are rapidly opening their doors to people who couldn't get loans before. They also have the welcome mat out for young first-time buyers. You'll find out here how all these new programs work. On life and health insurance: Life insurance and tax-deferred annuities are being widely sold as retirement investments. The new edition helps you decide when that's a good idea and when it isn't (hint: it usually isn't). In a greatly expanded section on HMOs, Quinn explains how to evaluate the choices you have and lays out your rights if your insurer lets you down. On retirement planning: Employees have built up significant assets in 401(k)s and other tax-deferred plans. The self-employed have several deductible options to choose from -- each one just right for a particular situation. An expanded retirement section helps you get the most from any retirement savings plan and forecasts how much you're likely to need in your old age. On post retirement planning: Given longer life spans, people who think they've retired haven't. A section for those past retirement lays out better investment strategies for making money last. On the checklists for changes in your life: The checklist chapter?one of the sections of the original edition that was consulted most often?has been expanded to include checklists for starting a home based business, teaching kids about money, unmarried couples, new widows and widowers, and defensive planning for a potential layoff. Quinn has also added to the existing checklists on pre- and post-marital planning, caring for an elderly parent, having a baby, finding day care, and enduring divorce. On finding a financial adviser: Almost every financial salesperson today claims to be a financial planner?so you'll learn more about how to separate the mutts from the purebreds. But with what you learn here you can be your own financial adviser. No one will ever care as much about your money as you do. The completely revised and updated Making the Most of Your Money will carry Americans through the millennium-pointing younger workers toward saving the rising incomes they're going to earn, boomers toward the retirement that can be more successful than they think, and retirees toward an investment plan they can be comfortable with. With this edition, you'll be making the most of your money ever.
Amazon.com Review Bestselling author Jane Bryant Quinn has revised and updated her classic 1991 primer on finance, Making the Most of Your Money, to prepare readers for the challenging fiscal atmosphere that she sees in the coming century. Written in her familiar, easily understood style, it starts out by helping you determine exactly where you stand on money matters and explaining basic money management techniques. Next, Quinn offers comprehensive discussions about insurance needs, home ownership, college funding, investment planning, and retirement. A useful series of appendices provides additional information on insurance, college, bonds, pensions, and more.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 183 more reviews...
  Good For Its Time July 13, 2008 Many of the negative reviews cite the books publication date. That date is no secret. I bought this book just after it came out and it was the main source of my financial education. The internet was not the force it is now where advice (good and bad) is a click away. I achieved what I would consider to be financial success and independence and this book was a great aid in that quest. I do agree that I would not now buy it again (unless an updated version appears) but it still has solid basic advice.
  This book allowed me to achieve financial freedom September 14, 2007 I bought this book in June 1995 at age 32. I recently purchased another copy (due to someone denying that I lent it to them...?? How could you forget borrowing a 2.5inch thick, 5 pound book?) I want to share with you all what this book did for me. It taught me the importance of setting concrete financial goals and measuring my net worth on a regular basis. I am proud to say that I have in the last 12 years set and then met most of my financial goals. I have excel spreadsheets that track my net worth annually from 1995 (when all of my net worth was the equity of my house) to today (I own my house outright, have 401K's, pre-paid college plans, stocks, and CD's). My net worth has grown by 1,800% in those 12 years. As I have gone thru new chapters of my life (making a will and saving for college once I had children, becoming my mom's guardian, choosing to retire early), I have been able to easily pick and choose the chapters of the book that I once glossed over and re-read them when they apply to a new stage of my life. I was always a motivated person who wanted to live under my means to achieve financial freedom, but this book gave me the roadmap I used. I highly recommend this book for people who want to learn how to manage their money and achieve their goals in life. The peace that financial freedom gives me is priceless. Read this book and live UNDER your financial means and you can have this freedom too.
  Solid Advice with Results January 29, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I purchased the original book years ago and have referred to it many times to build a foundation of financial knowledge. Ms. Quinn's book and her Newsweek column offer solid advice which I have used to build a comfortable retirement account, a college savings fund for my children, a low interest mortgage and an understanding of how it all works.
This book is also a great gift idea for college graduates and newlyweds.
  OUTSTANDING BOOK !! (and an obvious smear campaign) November 5, 2006 13 out of 14 found this review helpful
This was one of my first Personal Finance books (the 1991 version) and I bought the 1997 edition as soon as it came out. I wish there was a 2006 edition, I'd buy it immediately! The book is a comprehensive and well written primer on personal finance and can be used as a reference for years to come. True, this book is 10 years old, but guess what, sensible advice about saving and investing doesn't go out of date. There are a few updates needed to bring things like college savings plans, and Roth 401k's (new this year) up to date, but overall this is rock solid advice on which to build your financial foundation. There is an obvious pattern to the negative, overly angry, one star reviews which begin in the fall of 2001 and mostly run through early 2003, all of whom mark the negative reviews as helpful and the positive (real) reviews as unhelpful. It seems as if there were 80-100 of these placed over this time period, by whom I have no idea. There is speculation on that point in other posts. In short, no one with any sense who had read the book and was writing a serious review would give it one star. It is simply excellent. Do yourself a favor and read it.
  Comprehensive and clearly written December 3, 2005 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
This is not a faddish, Super Secrets of Getting Rich Quick book. It is a practical guide to not staying poor due to lack of information, and not becoming poor through bad financial judgement.
I have found this book very helpful in doing exactly what the title says - making the most of my money. While I can't say the this book was an easy read, it was worth the effort. I have been successful in avoiding consumer debt, keeping my credit rating healthy, setting up an investment plan, and generally sleeping better at night because I now know where my money is and what it is up to. I have read other financial planning and investment books since this one, and many of them have sound and useful information, as far as they go. None, however, seems as comprehensive and reliable as this one.
Here is my advice for you if you think you need to know more about money, but feel that a book this huge is too intimidating or time-consuming. Do what I did. Start with the chapters that are most relevant to your current situation. Got a problem? Look it up and read the parts that make sense. Then go back again and again, and read some more until you really understand that chapter or section (in my case, it was sentences at first). Eventually, it will become easier, and you can eventually master everything you need from this book by taking it in stages.
I love this book!!!
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