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Financial Tools on the
Web
Budgeting
www.Microsoft.com/money,
online version of the popular software package for tracking
spending.
www.Mint.com, a powerful,
free online tool
www.Quicken.intuit.com,
online version of popular software package
Charities
check
them out before you give
www.CharityNavigator.org
www.Dmachoice.org (to cut
down on junk mail)
www.Give.org
www.Guidestar.org
Credit
Cards
www.Bankrate.com
www.Cardtrak.com,
comparison shopping site
www.Cardratings.com,
comparison shopping site
www.FederalReserve.gov/pubs/shop,
Federal Reserve information on choosing a
card
Travel
www.FareCompare.com,
shows the lowest recent fare for a
route
www.Expedia.com, major
travel-shopping site
www.Hotels,com, you can guess
what this one's about
www.Travelocity.com,
major travel shopping site
Student Loans and Financial Aid
www.CollegeAnswers.com,
the education site for a large student-loan lender
www.CollegeBoard.com,
look for the Pay for College section
www.FAFSA.gov, the site
for the crucial financial-aid form
www.FastWeb.com,
comprehensive scholarship information
How
to Get Help
And don't forget that our updated client page (http://www.yebu.com/portal.htm)
offers a full list of who does what and who you should contact
for help with various issues. Contact numbers and email
links are available from that page as well.
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Wither
the Economy and Markets?
Writing in the New
York Times, economist and former Federal Reserve governor Alan
Blinder explains why recent Fed moves to stimulate the
economy are not necessarily inflationary. Adding to
banks' reserves doesn't cause inflation unless banks are
lending those reserves, something that isn't happening right
now. And as long as Fed Chair Ben Bernanke follows
through on his plans to soak up those excess reserves once
sustained growth is on the horizon, there's no reason to
believe that an inflation surge is inevitable. Economic View: Why
Inflation Isn't the Danger
Former Fed Chief Alan Greenspan,
meanwhile, believes that inflation may reappear in 2012,
depending on money supply, housing prices, and investor
psychology. Inflation
- the real threat to sustained
recovery.
Mark
Hulbert, writing in MarketWatch, notes that companies are
engaged in record share offerings, usually a sign of poor
market performance to come. Interestingly, several analysts
who subscribe to this inverse relationship remain "cautiously
bullish." Supply
and Demand.
The Conference Board reported that the US Index of Leading
Economic Indicators has risen for the second month in a
row. The Board is now predicting that the economy will
be back on a (slow) growth path before the end of the
year. Leading indicators for every major economy except
Japan rose last month. The
Report. The Conference
Board.
Interviewed by Knowledge @ Wharton.com, Jeremy
Siegel predicts another 15-20% rise in stock prices by
year's end. The
Market Will Stage Another Recovery.
Fareed Zakariah, writing in Newsweek, notes that every
other crisis in the 20th Century led to massively expanded
opportunities. This time is not different.
The Capitalist
Manifesto: Greed is Good.
When the current crisis is over, the reputation of
American-style capitalism will have taken a beating—not least
because of the gap between what Washington practices and what
it preaches. Disillusioned developing nations may well turn
their backs on the free market, warns Nobel laureate Joseph E.
Stiglitz, posing new threats to global stability and U.S.
security. Wall
Street's Toxic Message
Human Nature
Today
"Has there ever been a time when there were so many
different views of human nature floating around all at once?
The economists have their view, in which rational people
coolly chase incentives. Traditional Christians have their
view, emphasizing original sin, grace and the pilgrim’s
progress in a fallen world. And then there are the
evolutionary psychologists, who get the most media
attention."
read
David Brooks' entire column
Quote of the
Week The allure of evolutionary
psychology is that it organizes all behavior into one eternal
theory, impervious to the serendipity of time and place. But
there’s no escaping context. That’s worth remembering next
time somebody tells you we are hardwired to do this or
that.
David Brooks |