Author: thutrang | 6-03-2012, 10:43 | Views: 39
First, you must have a clear understanding of your financial capabilities before deciding on the kind of life you want to live. In many cases, people live beyond their financial capabilities and they end up taking loans which become difficult for them to repay later. If you have less money to spend when going out for shopping, make a list of what you think is urgent, avoid unnecessary spending. If you have a child, you can open for him/her a children`s account from your bank so that a certain percentage of your monthly or daily income is deducted and deposited into that account. This will help in educating him/her in the future and you will be relieved from the burden of paying school fees....
Author: thutrang | 16-12-2011, 07:11 | Views: 22
Before you make the decision to file personal bankruptcy, you need to realize that certain kinds of debt obligations will not be easy to get rid of. These include criminal fines, child support and alimony, and (in many cases) federal income taxes. Unfortunately, student loans also fall into this category.
It is very difficult to get rid of student loans even if you file bankruptcy. Congress designed the laws in such a way as to encourage banks to make loans to students, and this means that the law has made it difficult to discharge student loans. First of all, what happens if you simply stop making your student loan payments for any reason?....
Author: thutrang | 29-11-2011, 09:48 | Views: 16
Bankruptcy is a process for people who can no longer pay their debts that allow them to liquidate their assets to satisfy their debts or to create a repayment plan to satisfy those debts. There are many ways to file bankruptcy and it depends on whether the filer is an individual, business or municipality as to which option they choose.
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy is a case that does not involve filing for a repayment plan. The trustee investigates the debtor's nonexempt assets and uses these assets as a way of repaying the debtor's obligations. It is important to keep in mind that some of the debtor's property may be subject to liens. There are set court fees, miscellaneous administrative fees and a trustee surcharge for all bankruptcy cases. The fee charged by the attorney will vary by state....
Author: thutrang | 24-09-2011, 09:46 | Views: 25
The Business Assets
Assets are economic resources that are owned by a business and are expected to benefit the future operations. In most cases, the benefit to future operations comes in the form of positive future cash flows. The positive future cash flows may come directly as the asset is converted in to cash (collection of receivable) or indirectly as the asset is used in operating the business to create other assets that result in positive future cash flows (building, and land used to manufacture a product for sale). Assets may have a definite physical form such as buildings, machinery, or an inventory of merchandise. On the other hand, some assets exist not in physical or tangible form, but in the form of valuable legal claims or right; examples are amounts due from customers, investments in government binds and patent rights.
Author: thutrang | 13-09-2011, 11:43 | Views: 25
A company, like any other society, must exist for the achievement of some objective or objectives. Some people have suggested that a company has only one objective that is to make a profit. It is true that no company could survive permanently without making a profit but this is hardly the reason why it exists; it is a condition which must be satisfied if existence is to continue permanently. We cannot live without eating but we do not live in order to eat. Companies exist in order to satisfy consumers wants; and perhaps even to create wants before satisfying them, since in many cases these wants did not exist before they were suggested to consumers by advertising or other selling methods. It would, for example, hardly have occurred to people to want television sets before manufacturers had put the possibility of television before them. A company determines its objectives, therefore, by deciding what kind of consumer demands it proposes to attempt to satisfy, and if necessary, create.
Author: YeuVN | 5-07-2011, 21:48 | Views: 35
A little-noticed move by American Express to ban the purchase of medical marijuana with its credit cards has reignited a longstanding debate: How much can a credit card company control what you buy?
To the surprise of consumers, major credit card companies are making decisions about what they can and can't buy with their credit cards. What's off-limits? Legal purchases like gambling chips and donations to at least one controversial non-profit organization; in some cases, buying pornography is also restricted, and so, increasingly, is medical marijuana. Last month, shortly before Delaware became the 16th state to legalize medical marijuana, American Express told merchants that its cards could not be used to buy it.
Author: YeuVN | 4-07-2011, 04:59 | Views: 47
All around the nation, people are experiencing the ramifications of hard times in recent years, in more ways than one. In many cases, whole areas are disrupted by the economic decline, as people have lost their careers, and in more serious cases, they've given up their homes, but more than the average American is seeing the effects of the recession.
With some neighborhood markets still attempting to get back on their feet, the U.S. is now confronting another kind of dilemma, seeing as how companies have been known to file for bankruptcy, and recently Washington even wrestled with their own potential economic emergency. One town facing a town-wide bankruptcy issue that may drive wages down is Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and, as if that isn't enough, they might have to terminate of up to of their 62 city workers.