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الثلاثاء، 21 مارس 2017

Trump’s New Order Allows Huge Fees if You Default on Your Student Loans

The student loan crisis is worse than ever, with a rising number of college grads falling behind on repaying their loans. Last year alone, more than 1 million Americans defaulted on federal student loans, according to the Consumer Federation of America.

Now, Trump’s Department of Education just made its first major move on student loan issues: It’s reversing Obama-era guidelines that stopped lenders from charging huge fees to borrowers who miss payments but are still trying to catch up.

That’s right. Lenders are once again free to impose fees as high as 16% of the remaining principal and accrued interest on defaulted student loans — even if the borrower entered a loan rehabilitation program within 60 days of missing a payment.

This fun change could affect nearly 7 million people who collectively owe $162 billion in student loans, according to the Washington Post.

Naturally, consumer advocates are blasting the decision.

“With more than 3,000 Americans defaulting on a student loan every day, this just adds insult to injury,” said the Consumer Federation of America.

So why did the Trump administration do this? In a statement, the Education Department said it was rescinding this Obama initiative because it “would have benefitted from public input,” Buzzfeed reported.

No word yet on whether it might change it back after it gets public input.

Who Will This Change Affect?

So, could this change affect you?

That depends on when you got your student loans. Students who have taken out federal loans in the last few years don’t have to worry about this.

This change applies to people who received loans through the old bank-based federal lending program known as the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP). It was discontinued in 2010.

Since 2010, the Department of Education has issued federal student loans, and it doesn’t charge collection fees to borrowers who quickly agree to make good on their debts, The Atlantic magazine reported.

Bottom line: If you got your federal student loans before 2010, better not fall behind on them. You could end up paying high fees.

Your Turn: Have you ever fallen behind on your student loans?

Mike Brassfield (mike@thepennyhoarder.com) is a senior writer at The Penny Hoarder. His student loans are paid off, thank God.

The post Trump’s New Order Allows Huge Fees if You Default on Your Student Loans appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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Could Replacing Beer With (Legal) Bong Hits be a Smart Money Move?

Ganja. Green. Herb. Mary Jane. Cannabis. Chronic.

No matter what you call it, one thing is obvious: The marijuana industry is booming. Marijuana use is legal in some form in 26 states plus Washington, D.C. About 24.6 million Americans legally purchased pot in the last year alone.  

According to a recent study from Cannabiz Consumer Group, good ol’ (legal) Mary Jane is making beer drinkers put down their pints and pick up their bongs.

Of the study’s respondents, 27% of beer drinkers said they have substituted marijuana for beer — or they would if pot were legal in their state. In states where recreational pot is now legal, beer sales have reportedly lagged.

This got our Penny Hoarder brains thinking: No matter how you feel about marijuana legalization, is making the switch from craft beer to craft chronic a money-saving move?

How Much Does it Cost to Drink Beer?

In 2015, consumers purchased the equivalent of 2.8 billion 24-packs of beer in the U.S. In all, the U.S. beer industry sells more than $100 billion worth of beer and malt-based beverages each year.

If you’re an average beer drinker (you are at least the legal drinking age, right?), you ingested about 27.5 gallons of beer and cider during 2015.

Let’s put that in perspective: A typical bottle of beer has 12 ounces. A gallon is 128 ounces. That means the average beer consumer drank about 294 servings of beer in 2015.

Clearly they were double fisting. Or doing keg stands. Maybe a beer funnel was involved. It’s OK — we’ve all been there.

And the cost? Well, it depends on where you live and purchase your beer, but a 2014 survey by Survey Analytics says the average customer spends $1,270 on beer in a year.

Talk about an expensive novelty!

How Much Does it Cost to Smoke Pot?

So, the legal cannabis industry may be fairly new, but it’s no joke.

More people are smoking pot than you may think — about 1 in 10 adults in the U.S. has legally purchased pot since states began passing laws legalizing it in 1996. About 40% of adults who have no access to legal marijuana say they would purchase it if they could do so legally.

Headset Inc. also says the median spending for the “average” cannabis consumer was $647 annually. The data was pulled from more than 40,000 legal marijuana purchases in the state of Washington from September 2014 to July 2016.

According to Headset Inc., a company that specializes in cannabis use data, the average trip to a marijuana dispensary runs people between $25 and $50, and most people wait an average 19.5 days before hitting up the shop again.

(Note: The data was collected for the “average” cannabis consumer in Washington state. Some states have restrictions on how much ganja you can buy at one time, whereas there usually isn’t a limit to how much booze you can walk out of a store with.)

Is It Time to Light One Up?

According to our rough calculation, if the average beer consumer completely swapped beer and became an average legal marijuana consumer, they’d spend a whopping $623 less per year.

This 2014 report from The Washington Post also suggests that compared to the cost of alcohol, marijuana prices are a bargain.

Let’s not forget that alcohol use has considerably higher health costs than marijuana, according to most reports. Just sayin’.

Of course, we don’t live in a perfect world. We don’t know how many of those people smoking pot legally at an average cost of $647 per year are also spending $1,270 a year on beer. We also don’t know a lot of things, like how much of that beer drinkers would swap with pot, or how frequently they’d consume pot if they gave up beer.

But in the name of good fun, we might as well say the grass (LOL) and your wallet could be greener on the other side when it comes to beer versus pot.  

Your Turn: Do you think you’d save money by smoking pot instead of drinking beer?

Kelly Smith is a junior writer and engagement specialist at The Penny Hoarder. Catch her on Twitter at @keywordkelly.

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Produce Prices Are Skyrocketing Due to Heavy Rains. Here’s How to Save

California, are you alright over there, buddy?

It’s been a rough couple years for the Golden State. And the hits, apparently, just keep on coming.

After a pretty nasty drought, the weather on the West Coast decided it would pull a complete 180, and now it’s raining too much. Classic overcorrection, amiright?

The trouble is, farmers are now reporting the heavy rains this winter have delayed harvests and damaged many crops.

This means that over the next several months, we can expect to see produce shortages — and consequently, some serious price hikes on a lot of our favorite foods.

How Much Are We Talking?

Well, according to The Wall Street Journal, cauliflower prices have already jumped from $13 a case to around $48. A case of romaine lettuce has jumped from $12 to $50.

Those are some pretty significant increases.

In a recent news release, California Farm Bureau President Paul Wenger stated, “In the long term, the surge of storms should bring an improved water outlook, but it has definitely brought worries to farmers and ranchers whose land is inundated or whose crops may be at risk.”

So while the rain is a great thing in the long term, it’s seriously wreaking some havoc in the here and now.

‘I’m Kind of a Big Deal.’ – California

California produces a lot (emphasis on a lot) of the fruits and vegetables we consume. We’re talking 90% of the broccoli, 99% of the walnuts and artichokes, 95% of the celery and garlic, 89% of the cauliflower and 71% of the spinach, among many others.

The Wall Street Journal reports that some of the hardest-hit items are strawberries, almonds and celery, although the weather has affected many other crops.

The Salinas Valley, one of the major production areas dealing with these fluctuating weather patterns, exports most of the leafy greens on grocery store shelves. Goodbye, yummy salads.

But It’s Not Just California

While California is the biggest producer of most of the fruits and veggies we eat every day, many other states have also struggled with odd weather patterns in recent years.

While the rain has ruined California crops, the unseasonably warm weather in the Midwest has halted maple syrup production, along with apple and cherry growth.

And while farmers across the country are taking measures to circumvent the odd weather patterns, the highly volatile environment has made it more and more difficult to anticipate these changes in recent years.

Alternatives to Pricy Produce

Fortunately, there are a few ways to soften the financial blow of these produce delays.

If you’re anything like me, you make big plans to plant a garden every spring — and then you don’t. But this year is your year!

A successful garden can save you hundreds of dollars in groceries this year. And if that’s not cost-effective enough, check out this list of backyard garden produce that gives you the most bang for your buck.

If you need tips on how to start your garden (perhaps because you, like me, can manage to kill a desktop bamboo plant overnight), you might find this guide very helpful.

But if weeding a garden just isn’t your ideal way to spend a summer, consider using this trick to get your produce for way less.

Your Turn: What are some tricks you use to keep your produce budget low?

Grace Schweizer is a junior writer at The Penny Hoarder. She has big plans for a someday garden, but she also has a black thumb.

The post Produce Prices Are Skyrocketing Due to Heavy Rains. Here’s How to Save appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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CLOSING BELL: Stocks post their biggest loss this year

Financial companies, which soared in the months since the U.S. presidential election, fell sharply Tuesday.

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This Company Will Pay Someone to Travel the World in Style (Yes, Seriously)

So you want to travel the world.

Great!

How about taking a three-month hiatus from regular life to do it?

How about staying in coveted, envy-inducing, multi-million-dollar vacation homes and resorts?

How about getting paid $10,000 a month to do so — plus having all your travel costs covered?

You’re not dreaming.

ThirdHome, a luxury vacation home exchange program and travel club, is offering this glorious dream job to one lucky individual. All they’d have to do is post, blog and vlog about their experience travelling the globe and staying in up to 12 luxury homes.

So yeah, there’s some work involved. You have to be able to take photos, shoot videos and be a word master so you can convince the world of the awesomeness that is ThirdHome.

But if you were on vacation at these luxurious locales, I’m pretty certain your Facebook, Twitter and Instagram would be full of photos and videos from your adventure, regardless of whether you were getting paid.

A bonus: This gig is even cool with you taking your best buddy along — but no pets — though ThirdHome won’t pay your travel pal’s expenses.

To apply, you have to prove you can actually create captivating media by submitting a one-minute video to bestjobontheplanet@thirdhome.com, explaining why you are “the best candidate for the best job on the planet.”

Their words not mine, but I’m not going to argue.

The deadline is March 30, so get on it. No, seriously, RIGHT NOW.

ThirdHome is looking for a candidate who:

  • Has experience in social media, writing, blogging and vlogging
  • Can tell an enticing story and promote the company’s brand through words, pictures and video
  • Is no stranger to luxury and appreciates the finer things in life
  • Understands the hospitality industry
  • Has experience with international travel

Candidates also must be at least 18 with no criminal record, have a valid passport/visa and a driver’s license. This is a short-term contract position that requires the finalist to be available for three consecutive months from late summer to late fall.

And since travelling is a big part of the job, you need to be comfortable doing so. So if you grip the armrests when the plane takes off or if you’re intimately familiar with the term “motion sickness,” this may not be the job for you.

Let us know if you get the gig! (Take us with you!)

Your Turn: Do you want to get paid to travel?

Nicole Dow is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder. She thought she had finally found her dream job — but this job posting is giving her second thoughts.

The post This Company Will Pay Someone to Travel the World in Style (Yes, Seriously) appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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Here’s Who the IRS Lets You Count as a Dependent (Hint: Not Your Cat)

One of the trickiest parts of completing your yearly tax return is figuring out who qualifies as a dependent.

Some examples are pretty obvious: Your 3-year-old toddler, for example.

But what about the elderly aunt who lives with you? Or a foster child? An adult cousin on permanent disability?

Let’s break down what makes someone a dependent and how to find out if you’re allowed to claim them on your taxes.

Why It’s Important to Include Qualifying Dependents on Your Taxes

Don’t overlook the impact dependents have on your taxes.

“For every qualified dependent you claim, you reduce your 2016 taxable income by $4,050,” explains Intuit.

Let’s take a look at that in practical terms.

If you have two children and made $20,000 last year, that means your total taxable income for 2016 drops to $11,900 — and that’s before you take any other deductions.

The lower your taxable income, the less you pay in taxes.

And who doesn’t like to pay less taxes?

It’s also important to figure out your qualifying dependents so you can deduct certain expenses associated with their care.

Who Qualifies As My Dependent?

The IRS breaks down dependents into two categories:

1. A qualifying child must:

  • Meet certain relationship criteria.
  • Be younger than you and:
    • Under 19 years old, or
    • A student under 24 years old on the last day of the tax year.
    • Have lived with you for more than half of the year, unless one of these special circumstances apply.

There is no age limit if your child is “permanently and totally disabled” or meets the qualifying relative criteria.

Additional restrictions apply, so be sure to consult the IRS guidelines for qualifying children for more information.

2. A qualifying relative:

  • Does not have to be related to you by blood.
  • Must have made less than $4,050 in gross income during the tax year.
  • Must have received more than half of their total support for the year from you.
  • May be any age.

Additional restrictions apply here too, so be sure to consult the IRS guidelines for qualifying relatives for more information.

If you provided most or all of someone’s financial support in 2016, it’s definitely worth looking into whether they qualify as a dependent.

That includes your parents or other older relatives, your boyfriend or girlfriend, or anyone else who lives with you — with one notable exception.

You cannot claim your spouse as a dependent, says the IRS.

The IRS has the final say on who qualifies as a dependent and who doesn’t. If you’re not sure, the agency’s interactive quiz can help you figure it out.  

Your Turn: Has claiming dependents made a big difference on your taxes?

Lisa McGreevy is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder. She likes bringing you this information, but she is not a tax preparer, and this is not legal tax advice.

The post Here’s Who the IRS Lets You Count as a Dependent (Hint: Not Your Cat) appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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Putting the Checklist Manifesto to Work for Better Financial and Personal Habits

checklist manifestoSeveral years ago, I read a wonderful book called The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande. I thought highly enough of the book after reading it that I wrote an article about it for The Simple Dollar, but what I didn’t realize at the time was that this book would subtly stick in my head like few others that I’ve ever read in my life. Several years later, I still see this book resonating for me in the personal, financial, and professional choices I make.

So, let’s start at the beginning?

What Is The Checklist Manifesto?

The Checklist Manifesto is a book by renowned surgeon and writer Atul Gawande about why he uses checklists for many of the procedures he follows in his work and in his life. When he has a task before him, he often breaks out a checklist that he follows step by step to ensure that the task is done well.

Many of the examples that Gawande uses in the book come from his career in surgery, where he uses checklists to make sure that surgical prep is done correctly and that medical procedures are done well, but he also uses them in many other aspects of his life as well.

If you’re having some difficulty with the idea, think of using a recipe to cook a meal. When you’re using a well-written recipe, you don’t have to think about what’s next. Instead, you just follow what’s written and focus on executing those steps as well as possible.

Gawande is a pretty renowned author at this point, having written many articles for a wide variety of publications (his articles about the surgical trade for The New Yorker are very well known and respected). He’s published several books besides The Checklist Manifesto, too – I’ve personally enjoyed Complications and have both Being Mortal and Better on my (lengthy) to-be-read list.

What’s So Great About a Checklist?

The advantage of a checklist is that it separates the thinking process that goes into defining how to do something in the best way from the actual actions of executing that something. This enables the person that’s actually doing the task to focus on the task itself, rather than thinking about and trying to remember each step in the task.

A checklist is thus broken down into two parts.

The first part is the actual creation of the checklist itself. It’s time spent thinking through the exact details of a procedure to make sure that it’s being done as efficiently and correctly as possible in order to get the best results possible.

The second part is the execution of the items on the checklist. This is when you’re actually doing the procedure as defined by the checklist that you thought about earlier.

Sometimes, you’ll bounce back and forth between the two, especially at first as you hone that checklist and ensure that it’s as good as can be.

Thus, when you reach a point where you have a trusted checklist in front of you, you don’t have to think about the steps in the procedure any more. You don’t have to waste brainpower or focus thinking about what the next step is or whether you’re missing anything or whether you’re doing it right. You just trust that checklist. You focus on doing each item on the checklist to the best of your ability, then you move on to the next one. You don’t have to waste brain space on thinking about the next task, remembering it, wondering if you’re forgetting anything – all of that is gone. You just follow the checklist.

Using Checklists in Real Life

The ideas in The Checklist Manifesto percolated in my head for a few years. I thought about the book fairly regularly and re-read it a time or two.

Eventually, I started applying it.

Over the course of several months, I sat down with my journal and developed checklists for several things that I do regularly in my life. I made a “weekday wake-up” checklist. I made a “grocery trip” checklist. I made a “after school routine” checklist. I made a big handful of checklists for my professional work.

At first, I thought this was kind of a lark, just to play around with the idea. I didn’t think I’d actually use them that much.

What I discovered was that this whole process was more valuable than I thought.

First of all, by thinking about ordinary things that I did in my life as a “checklist,” I really began to look at the steps involved with a certain seriousness. As I developed those checklists, I would start by thinking about the ordinary way I did things, but as I actually wrote down those steps, I would ask myself if those steps really made sense. Did it make the most sense to do things this way? Or did it make more sense to do things in a different order or with different steps involved?

Second, when I actually made a “good” checklist – one that I was happy with – I wanted to actually use it. I recognized that the revised process that I’d developed for the checklist was usually at least a little different than how I normally did things, and I also recognized that I felt that there were real improvements, so I actually wanted to do the task according to my new checklist.

Third, I often discovered flaws in my checklists, which sent them back to the drawing board. As I tried using them, I’d find that I missed some important step or I did some things in the wrong order, and that would push me back to an editing process. I quickly learned that the “good” checklist I’d developed on the first attempt was usually quite good in some respects and a failure in others, so it needed to be revised.

Fourth, those revisions often unveiled even more improvements that I hadn’t previously considered. I found that when I revised the list and tried it again and revised it again, I was gradually moving toward a much better way of doing something in my life. Whether it was something as simple as defining how I buy groceries to something as complex as my professional workflow, the revision cycle almost always made the process better.

Fifth, by the time I actually had a lean, mean final checklist, I wanted to use it. I discovered along the way that by doing a procedure by following a checklist, I could focus on just doing all of the steps well, so that’s what I started doing. As a result, I use checklists for a lot of things these days, checklists that I’ve honed over the years for common things.

A Checklist Example – Buying Groceries

To see how all of this really works, I’ll start with a very practical example that we all use in our financial lives: buying groceries. I have a pretty slick checklist that I use whenever I’m planning a run to the grocery store, so I’ll walk you through that checklist.

Here’s the whole checklist, for starters.
– Download grocery flyers for Fareway and Hy-Vee
– Make a list of all on-sale produce and staples
– Look in pantry and refrigerator for items that need to be used and add to list
– Write out calendar for upcoming week and list events
– Mark days for slow cooker and fast recipes and days where we have to rely on a meal from the freezer (and note taking that item out of the freezer two days before)
– Search for recipes using ingredients and time constraints
– Add recipes to calendar in appropriate places
– Fill in breakfast and lunch and snack options for each day, one at a time
– Make grocery list of missing ingredients from recipes
– Eat something
– Pick up reusable bags and freezer bags
– Go to store with list and shop

At the end of this checklist, I’ve produced a weeklong meal plan and calendar on our whiteboard and have the ingredients on hand to make all of it.

This checklist took some revision. I learned through revision that eating something late in the process, but before I actually went to the store, was invaluable at keeping impulse buys at bay. I learned through revision that including details, like remembering the reusable bags, is important because it’s something that I should do but often forget, as reusable bags never rip or fail when grocery shopping and they tend to keep groceries in better shape on the way home. I learned through revision that our family dinner is really the centerpiece meal of our day (since we can usually all sit around the table together for that meal) and that the other meals can be filled in with simple items or leftovers, so I plan accordingly for that by starting with the main meal and then filling in the others afterwards.

I actually use this checklist every time I decide that a grocery shopping trip is in order. I have it on my to-do list as a recurring event each Friday and I usually allot about 90 minutes for the whole process. When it comes up, I simply grab the checklist and start working through it.

Practical Use of the Checklists

So, how do I actually do this? How do I put checklists to practical use in my day-to-day life?

First of all, when I’m developing a checklist, I usually do it in Evernote. My absolute first draft is usually in my personal handwritten journal, but then I move it to Evernote when I’m actually making the checklist and revising it and seeing if it works.

Having it in a digital format that’s easy to access anywhere is really valuable for me, because I can just try it anywhere that makes sense just using my phone and I can edit and update it on my phone or at any computer. That’s convenient.

Second, when I’ve revised the checklist to the point that I really trust it, I print it off and make a laminated copy of it. I keep the note in Evernote for future reference and for times that I don’t happen to have the laminated version, but I usually rely on laminated versions of checklists that I actually check off with a dry erase marker. I keep these in a pile in my office.

Third, I have many of the checklists stored in my to-do list manager as templates. This enables me to just copy that template wherever I need it so that I can just start that process using my normal to-do list manager (I use Todoist as of this writing, but I change sometimes).

There’s one final big question that people always ask that really needs addressing.

Why Invest the Time to Use a Checklist for Ordinary Things That Are Routine?

For a lot of people, the idea of using such a checklist for ordinary life tasks seems completely different than what they’re used to and perhaps a little alien. Does someone really need a checklist for the grocery store trip?

That’s exactly how I felt until a few years ago when I began to realize how often my grocery store trips were imperfect in some fashion.

I’d forget to eat a snack before I left, so I’d get to the store and be hungry and buy a bunch of impulse stuff.

I’d forget to include snacks on my grocery list and not realize it until I got home, which meant that my kids would probably end up eating something subpar after school or not have granola bars for their backpacks.

I’d forget the reusable bags and find myself using flimsy plastic bags and then one of them would inevitably rip and I’d have apples rolling all over the back of my car, leaving some of them bruised up and then thrown away.

I’d forget to plan for lunch on that holiday from school and thus have to scramble at the last minute to come up with something to feed a horde of hungry children.

I’d forget to complete my grocery list in some way and then find myself ad-libbing in the store, tossing unplanned stuff in the cart that was probably unnecessary.

All of those things cost time and money and frustration, too. All of those things are completely avoided with a trusted checklist. If I can remember just one thing – “if I’m going to the grocery store, use the checklist” – each time that a grocery store trip pops up as a task to take care of, I don’t forget those things.

So, there’s two big reasons why I actually use the checklist idea.

First, as I’m actually making and honing the list, I usually figure out ways to improve a normal routine that saves time and money. I make that routine much better through a series of revisions to the checklist as I’m defining it. Those revisions always save time and money.

Second, when I have a finished list, if I just let myself trust that list instead of my own instincts, I move through it quickly and don’t forget anything important along the way. I find that if I just thoroughly trust that list, I’m not thinking at all about what comes next on that list. I think just about the task at hand, I’m focused wholly on finding recipes, not on remembering to grab reusable bags on my way out the door on on remembering snacks for the band trip on Tuesday. This not only makes the process move more smoothly from beginning to end, it actually makes the process faster than ever.

For a long time, I figured that I would just abandon actually using the checklists once I had a smooth procedure that I had down cold, but I actually found that I still like using it, even though I can list off the items on most of my lists off the top of my head. It’s because I can trust the list and then focus entirely on the task at hand and not have to try to remember or think of the next step at any point. Even with the most frequently repeated tasks, a checklist still saves money and time.

Do I use checklists for everything? No. I use them where they make sense. For a while, I overdid it and had checklists for all kinds of things, but I found that once I thought through the process a few times, I didn’t really need a checklist. Right now, I have a “wake-up checklist” that I do in the first hour each morning, an “after school checklist” that I do after each school day, a “grocery store shopping checklist,” about five more personal ones, and about ten different professional ones. They’re the ones where I’m glad to have a checklist to offload some of my thinking.

Final Thoughts

The Checklist Manifesto is one of the most influential books I’ve ever read in terms of my thinking and life planning. I’ve come to use checklists in my personal and professional life to make things more efficient in terms of both money and time. Checklists have made many of the things I do ordinarily every day much faster and much more likely to result in the success that I desire, which usually means more money in my pocket.

If you take nothing else from this post, take this: it is well worth your time to rethink the way you do ordinary routines in your life. Break them down into little steps and think about whether those steps make sense, whether new steps make sense, or whether a new order makes sense. Assemble a better procedure and then consciously try it out for a while. If you move on to using a checklist, that will probably be helpful too, but simply improving your routines a little bit will pay huge dividends of money and time going forward.

Good luck!

The post Putting the Checklist Manifesto to Work for Better Financial and Personal Habits appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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Waitrose to restrict free tea and coffee offer

Waitrose members will no longer receive a free cup of tea or coffee when they visit their local shop - unless they make a purchase.

Waitrose members will no longer receive a free cup of tea or coffee when they visit their local shop - unless they make a purchase.

At present, members are able to simply swipe their membership card and receive a free tea and coffee once a day without buying anything.

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OPENING BELL: Tech leads an early gain on Wall Street

Apple and Microsoft help bump up early trading.

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Savings update: where to find the top Isa deals

Savers have just a couple of weeks to use their cash Isa allowance of up to £15,240 this tax year which ends on April 5.

Savers have just a couple of weeks to use their cash Isa allowance of up to £15,240 this tax year which ends on April 5.

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Vodafone mobile prices to rise by 3.2% from April

Vodafone has today confirmed that mobile prices will rise by 3.2% from April in line with today’s inflation figures.

Vodafone has today confirmed that mobile prices will rise by 3.2% from April in line with today’s inflation figures.

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9 Expenses That Are Tax Deductible (Sorry, Your Dog Isn’t One of Them)

During tax season, it sometimes feels like we’re giving away all our hard-earned cash to the government.

Not true.

We’re required to pay taxes on our income, but there are legal ways to reduce the amount of income that Uncle Sam can tax.

Deductions are a taxpayer’s best friend.

What Is a Tax Deduction?

You’re allowed to deduct several types of personal expenses from your taxable income each year.

“This can really pay off during tax season because the reduction to taxable income reduces the amount of income that is subject to federal income tax,” explains Intuit.

But don’t confuse tax deductions with tax credits — they are two entirely different things.

Deductions are expenses you incurred throughout the tax year that you can subtract from your taxable income. Deductions lower your tax bill by reducing the amount of money you pay taxes on.

Credits reduce the amount of taxes you owe. Credits are the coupons of tax law. A credit is a dollar-for-dollar reduction in the amount you owe.

I know this can get confusing, but hang in there. Deductions are about to become clear in a minute (well, as clear as tax law can ever be).

Show Me Some Examples of Deductions

Many things qualify as deductions on your taxes — probably more than you’d expect.

Let’s look at some real-world examples of tax deductions.

There are many more deductions available to taxpayers, so be sure to take a look at the IRS website for a comprehensive list.

Should I Itemize or Take a Standard Deduction?

If it’s too much of a pain to figure out what deductions you’re eligible for, you don’t have to itemize them one by one.

It’s perfectly OK to take a standard deduction and call it a day.

Just remember that your tax return may be smaller than if you’d itemized your deductions one by one.

Doing taxes is a drag, but at least we can deduct some of the things we spent money on during the year from our taxable income.

Uncle Sam’s not such a bad guy after all.

Your Turn: What’s the most interesting deduction on your tax return?

Lisa McGreevy is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder. She likes bringing you this information, but she is not a tax preparer, and this is not legal tax advice.

The post 9 Expenses That Are Tax Deductible (Sorry, Your Dog Isn’t One of Them) appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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Inflation reaches highest level since 2013

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rate of inflation rose from 1.8% in the year to January to 2.3% in the year to February, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has today announced.

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rate of inflation rose from 1.8% in the year to January to 2.3% in the year to February, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has today announced.

February’s rate is the highest since September 2013, having steadily risen since late 2015.

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Few providers to offer Lifetime Isa at launch

Savers looking to build up a deposit for a first home or to top up a workplace pension will be disappointed to learn that only a minority of providers will have a Lifetime Isa (Lisa) available from launch.

Savers looking to build up a deposit for a first home or to top up a workplace pension will be disappointed to learn that only a minority of providers will have a Lifetime Isa (Lisa) available from launch.

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Three Things Nobody Tells You About Your Credit

If you’re like most Americans, you probably learned absolutely nothing about credit as a part of your high school or college education. As a result, many young adults enter the “real” world grossly unprepared when it comes to their credit management skills. This is very unfortunate since credit can have such a profound impact on your financial well-being and success.

So how are we learning about credit? Unless you were lucky enough to have a loved one teach you — or wise enough to research and study the topic for yourself — it’s normally all about trial and error. Even if you have taken steps to educate yourself, credit is a broad topic and there are many myths and unknowns. Here are three things you may not have realized about your credit:

The Accuracy of Your Credit Reports Is Your Responsibility

You certainly have the right to expect your credit reports to contain accurate information. In fact, you are conferred this right, among many others, in a federal consumer protection statute called the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Yet while you have the right to expect credit report accuracy, the only person who can really verify that accuracy is you and you alone.

When the credit bureaus receive information about you from a lender or other data provider, they generally have no reason to doubt the information’s accuracy. Once the information is received, the credit bureaus will load it into their credit file system and it will ultimately appear on your credit reports. This means that an incorrect account, wrong balance, or invalid late payment could potentially show up on your credit reports without your knowledge.

Furthermore, the credit bureaus themselves make their own mistakes from time to time. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission estimates the existence of over 40 million mistakes present on the credit reports of U.S. consumers.

Credit reporting mistakes happen. This is a fact. Undetected mistakes can remain on your reports, damaging your credit scores and potentially making it difficult or impossible for you to qualify for new financing. It’s up to you to routinely check your credit reports for and to alert the credit bureaus if you discover a mistake. You can check them for free, right now, at http://ift.tt/o2j1vQ.

You Shouldn’t Focus Solely on Your Credit Scores

You read that right. Yes, of course your credit scores are important. Credit scores can impact your ability to qualify for a loan, a credit card, and can even have an influence over your insurance premiums. However, if you’re working to improve your credit, then focusing solely on your credit scores can be a mistake.

Between VantageScore, FICO, and the countless other non-branded credit scoring systems in use today, there are hundreds or thousands of three-digit combinations commonly referred to as credit scores. You’ll never see them all, and you’ll drive yourself crazy chasing them around. If a lender pulls your credit scores today and you check them online 20 minutes later, it’s almost guaranteed there will be some difference between the sets of numbers you receive.

Instead of focusing on your credit scores, you should shift your attention to your credit reports.

Although hundreds of credit scores are commercially available, the good news is that every one of those scores is based on the same information – the data contained in your credit reports. Establishing positive credit management habits such as paying off your credit card balances in full each month, making all payments on time, and only applying for credit as really needed, should ultimately begin to help improve your credit scores no matter who is pulling them and what brand they’re using.

Paying Off Negative Accounts Won’t Undo Their Damage

When most consumers set out to try to rebuild their damaged credit, they start by trying to pay off or settle old derogatory accounts. Yet, as of now, paying off defaulted accounts will not erase the negative impact which the account had on your credit in the first place, nor will it cause the account to be removed.

I qualify that statement with “as of now” because some time in 2017 a program called the National Consumer Assistance Plan, or NCAP, may alter what negative information will remain on consumer credit reports.

Credit scoring models like VantageScore and FICO were originally designed to pay attention not so much to the balances on your derogatory accounts, but the fact that a negative occurred at all. As a result, paying off that $2,000 defaulted credit card account probably will not lead to a higher credit score. You may ask “why?” The answer is that credit scoring systems are not designed to predict the likelihood that you’ll default for a certain amount of money, but are designed to predict the likelihood that you’ll go seriously delinquent on any account, regardless of the amount.

Related Articles:

John Ulzheimer is an expert on credit reporting, credit scoring, and identity theft. He has written four books on the topic and has been interviewed and quoted thousands of times over the past 10 years. With time spent at Equifax and FICO, Ulzheimer is the only credit expert who actually comes from the credit industry. He has been an expert witness in over 230 credit related lawsuits and has been qualified to testify in both federal and state courts on the topic of consumer credit.

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If You Work From Home, Here Are 11 Tax Deductions You Need to Know About

Working from home affords you many things — flexibility, freedom, independence. But it can also cost you plenty — from the high-speed internet you need to stay in touch with clients to your ability to have a normal social life.

Fortunately, the government recognizes this and offers plenty of tax deductions to people who work out of their homes. Read on to find out what you might be eligible for if you work from home.

Self-Employed vs. Remote Workers

Most of the following deductions apply largely to the self-employed, also known as independent contractors. That’s because when you’re an employee of a company, your company foots the bill for 50% of things like Social Security and Medicare taxes, and withholds the other 50% from your paycheck to pay the rest.

But when you’re self-employed, you’re responsible for both halves — something too many independent contractors learn by surprise when April rolls around and they find out how much they owe in taxes. (As a rule of thumb, you should set aside around one-third of your self-employment income for taxes.)

To offset this additional expense, the IRS allows self-employed workers to deduct certain business-related costs, so long as they itemize each of these expenses on their returns. That means you’ll need to keep detailed records and receipts throughout the year.

If you’re a remote employee — you work for one company but do so from home — you will only be eligible to deduct expenses incurred out of your own pocket at your employer’s request.

What You Can Deduct

According to IRS guidelines, “To be deductible, a business expense must be both ordinary and necessary.” This includes:

1. Home Office

If you have a dedicated room or workspace in your home you use solely for business purposes, it counts as a “home office,” and you can deduct a portion of certain home expenses for it. It doesn’t need a fixed partition, like a wall or a door to close, but you do need to clearly identify it as a separate space (i.e., a dedicated corner of your kitchen).

So if your home is 1,200 square feet and your home office is 120 square feet, that means it makes up 10% of your home’s square footage, so you can deduct 10% of the following:

  • Rent (NOT monthly mortgage payments).
  • Utilities (heat, electricity, internet, landline).
  • Mortgage interest.
  • Homeowners insurance.
  • Property taxes.

Remote workers, take note: You can only deduct a home office if your employer asks you to work from home “for the convenience of your employer.” If you’ve negotiated a few work-from-home days to accommodate your own schedule, this does not count.

2. Office Supplies

From staples to printer paper, office supplies are deductible. Just be careful with larger “supplies,” like furniture.

If it’s essential to your business (think: desk, desk chair, filing cabinet), you can probably deduct it. If it’s not (think: picture frames and a second, comfier chair for brainstorming in), you probably can’t.

3. Equipment

You can also deduct any equipment you buy for your business, like computers, printers and accessories (headsets, webcams, etc.), as well as any repairs on these items. If you have a smartphone you use solely for business purposes, you can deduct the cost of the phone and monthly bill.

If your industry requires specialty equipment, like camera gear for photographers, that also qualifies.

4. Software

Do you use a paid invoicing system to bill your freelance clients? You can deduct that. Graphic design software, PDF software, word processing software? You can deduct those, too. As long as you use them strictly for business, any software you purchase or pay for monthly qualifies.

5. Travel Costs

If you ever need to travel to visit a client or attend a conference, you can deduct your mileage or airfare. The same goes for any lodging, parking fees and other travel-related expenses you incur on your own dime.

6. Meals and Entertainment

Be careful with this category, as it can be all too tempting to write off business meetings that aren’t strictly business.

Coffee meeting with a new client to discuss strategy? Deductible.

Five-course dinner with friends where you spend 15 minutes talking business? Not so much.

As a rule, expect the IRS to limit your deductions to 50% of business-related “entertainment” costs, so keep things modest.

7. Training and Education

You can deduct any professional education necessary to run or grow your business, so go ahead and sign up for that course or webinar you’ve been wanting to take.

8. Marketing and Advertising

If you attend a trade show, send out flyers or buy a box of business cards, this counts as marketing, and you can deduct it. Same goes for any fees in connection with a personal website that advertises your services — hosting fees, WordPress theme purchases, etc.

9. Professional Services

When you hire someone to help you with your business, it’s deductible. So keep track of those invoices from the IT pro who debugged your website, the attorney who reviewed a tricky contract and the CPA who put together your tax returns.

10. Health Insurance

You can deduct 100% of your health insurance premiums for yourself and any covered spouse and dependents, if you meet the following criteria:

  • You’re self-employed.
  • Your business is claiming a profit for the tax year.
  • You (and your spouse and dependents) were not eligible for coverage from an employer or under your spouse’s plan during the months you’re claiming.

11. Miscellaneous

Throughout the year, make note of any other expenses that the IRS might consider necessary in the normal course of business. This could include holiday gifts for your best clients (within reason), banking fees, shipping fees, post office box fees, etc.

Your Turn: Do you work from home? If so, did you realize you could deduct all these things?

Kelly Gurnett is a freelance blogger, writer and editor who runs the blog Cordelia Calls It Quits, where she documents her attempts to rid her life of the things that don’t matter and focus more on the things that do. Follow her on Twitter @CordeliaCallsIt.

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How to Stop Charging by the Hour and Create Packages to Level Up Your VA Business

By Emily Hirsh There is a certain luxury that comes with being a Virtual Assistant, with one of the most alluring being the flexibility in time, workload, and income. It is also an ever-evolving field—both a blessing and a curse—thanks to the growth of online entrepreneurship and the expansion of brick and mortar businesses to the […]

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