Posts tagged as:

economic stimulus

missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Are You a Striver or a Thriver?Are You a Striver or a Thriver?

Did you miss this week’s show? Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Attend our one hour event live over the internet on Tuesday at 11:00 am or 6:00 pm Pacific: Don’t miss your chance to understand how to protect your money during this economic crisis but get competitive rate of returns during the good years. This strategy is called indexing and you need to know all about it. Call 888-76-Radio (888-767-2346) to register for either event on Tuesday.

Three solutions for economic stimulus: 1) Where is the flat tax?  Let’s make taxes simple.  How about a one page tax return that takes less than an hour to fill out.  2) Tax us when we consume, not when we conserve. 3) Privatize Social Security.

Five categories of financial mindsets: 1) Strivers – These are the people who have too much month left at the end of the money.  They can also be called financial jellyfish.  2) Arrivers – Those who learn and apply money dynamics 3) Thrivers – These are individuals who understand how to use the three miracles of wealth accumulation.  4) Survivors – These are people who hunker down and stop doing what they use to do to accumulate their money.  5) Divers – These individuals will outlive their money!

New FREE Missed Fortune E-book: Baby Boomer Blunders. THE PROBLEM? The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download at www.babyboomerblunders.com

{ 0 comments }

In my last blog article I talked about the magnitude of the national debt and the $100 trillion of unfunded liability the government has incurred with the Social Security system.

The government is short on meeting its current bills and will be significantly short on future promises. The USA is living beyond its means.

budget no money Economic Stimulus that Won’t Cost Tax Payers $3.6 Trillion  $36K Each   My opinion is that Congress is uselessly rearranging the deck chairs on a ship that is slowly sinking with too much debt.

Over the past several decades, the U.S. economy has become increasingly intertwined with the global economy.

From foreign investments in U.S. companies, to overseas outsourcing, to giant multinational corporations doing business around the globe, we are inextricably connected to the world market.

The current administration and Congress are making a futile attempt to regain choice and control over what has become a world economy, assuming their course of action will somehow mend the U.S. economy.

This approach will only lead our country to retrogress rather than progress. These are misguided efforts. The federal government is essentially investing in the wrong places with just more inefficient government programs.

We need to place choice and control in better hands-our hands.

If the $3.6 trillion this administration plans on spending to stimulate the economy were placed in the hands of the average American entrepreneur, I’m convinced the economy would be turned around within a year.

If the $3.6 trillion were credited to American tax payers in less withholding tax for several months, I’m sure people wouldn’t be investing the money in GM (Government Motors) stock!

My ideas for an Economic Stimulus Package that won’t cost tax payers $3.6 trillion would include:

  1. Educating people on how to raise their credit score by 30 points or more, which would put $700 a month back into the average American’s monthly income.
  2. Teaching people how to take ownership of their future rather than rely on the government to take care of them.
  3. Rewarding people for saving and investing rather than taxing them for doing so.
  4. Instituting a flat income tax of 15 – 20 percent for everyone, along with a national consumption tax.
  5. Privatizing Social Security.

Since there is little chance of government giving economic choice and control back to the people, what we can do is empower ourselves. Sound financial education is the key.

Doug Andrew

Photo Credit Jeff Keen

{ 0 comments }