Money for Millennials

Manage and Build Your Financial Security

$40.00 US
DK. | DK
On sale Apr 09, 2024 | 9 Hours and 54 Minutes | 9780593961445
Sales rights: US/CAN (No Open Mkt)
The all-inclusive guide to managing your money in your 20s and 30s!


Money for Millennials provides you with the basic tools you need to manage your life and plan for your future financially. You will learn to manage every aspect of your personal finances, as well as strengthen your financial plan to yield better returns on your investments.

In this guide, you get:

  • The basics of personal finance: creating and following a budget, learning to maintain a robust savings, and building an emergency fund.
  • A more relevant look at online banking and best account options available.
  • Honesty about credit cards, how to use them, and how to pay off debt judiciously.
  • Innovative plans for paying off student loan debt and understanding your options if you choose to further your education.
  • Advice on making big purchases such as homes and transportation.
  • Tips on making the right choices when unemployed or underemployed or lack employer-sponsored healthcare options.
  • A thorough explanation of how to make the most of retirement plans: 401(k) plans, individual retirement accounts (IRAs), etc.


© Sarah Young Fisher © Susan Shelly McGovern © 2024 DK Audio
"Financial consultant Fisher and researcher McGovern provide basic financial information for readers in their 30s and 40s. This volume, which builds upon Fisher and McGovern’s Idiot’s Guide to Personal Finance in Your 20s and 30s, uses 16 chapters, divided into three sections, to cover foundational basics (budgets, credit), changes with life events (birth of a child, buying a house, divorce), and future-planning (investments, retirement). Frequent subheadings and chapter summaries keep readers on track. The book concludes with 55 pages of glossary, resources (print, web, apps, podcasts), and sample forms (prenup, pet-care trust). VERDICT Provides a step-by-step foundation of generally conservative financial information, suitable for all ages and collections." —Library Journal

About

The all-inclusive guide to managing your money in your 20s and 30s!


Money for Millennials provides you with the basic tools you need to manage your life and plan for your future financially. You will learn to manage every aspect of your personal finances, as well as strengthen your financial plan to yield better returns on your investments.

In this guide, you get:

  • The basics of personal finance: creating and following a budget, learning to maintain a robust savings, and building an emergency fund.
  • A more relevant look at online banking and best account options available.
  • Honesty about credit cards, how to use them, and how to pay off debt judiciously.
  • Innovative plans for paying off student loan debt and understanding your options if you choose to further your education.
  • Advice on making big purchases such as homes and transportation.
  • Tips on making the right choices when unemployed or underemployed or lack employer-sponsored healthcare options.
  • A thorough explanation of how to make the most of retirement plans: 401(k) plans, individual retirement accounts (IRAs), etc.


© Sarah Young Fisher © Susan Shelly McGovern © 2024 DK Audio

Praise

"Financial consultant Fisher and researcher McGovern provide basic financial information for readers in their 30s and 40s. This volume, which builds upon Fisher and McGovern’s Idiot’s Guide to Personal Finance in Your 20s and 30s, uses 16 chapters, divided into three sections, to cover foundational basics (budgets, credit), changes with life events (birth of a child, buying a house, divorce), and future-planning (investments, retirement). Frequent subheadings and chapter summaries keep readers on track. The book concludes with 55 pages of glossary, resources (print, web, apps, podcasts), and sample forms (prenup, pet-care trust). VERDICT Provides a step-by-step foundation of generally conservative financial information, suitable for all ages and collections." —Library Journal