Everyone's Money Book on Credit (Goodman, Jordan Elliot. Everyone's Money Book Series.)
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Product Description
For years, Americans have sought answers to their financial questions in Everyone’s Money Book by Jordan E. Goodman. Now even more detailed answers can be found in a new series of books that focus on single topics in a short, affordable format. Each book in the series contains the most current information on its topic as well as just the right resources—worksheets, Web sites, newsletters, consumer groups, government agencies, and more—to help you put this information to immediate use.
Whether it’s how to assemble a great financial plan, invest in stocks, save for college, improve your credit record, buy real estate, or build your retirement nest egg, the Everyone’s Money Book series has the answers and resources you need.
The books in the series include:
Everyone’s Money Book on College
Everyone’s Money Book on Credit
Everyone’s Money Book on Financial Planning
Everyone’s Money Book on Real Estate
Everyone’s Money Book on Retirement Planning
Everyone’s Money Book on Stocks, Bonds, and Mutual Funds
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1485816 in Books
- Published on: 2002-08-20
- Released on: 2002-08-20
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 208 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Jordan E. Goodman is a weekly contributor to Public Radio International’s Marketplace in the Morning and appears frequently as a personal finance commentator on NBC, MSNBC, CNN, CNBC, and Fox television. He also is a frequent guest on radio call-in shows around the country. On the editorial staff of Money magazine for 18 years, where he served as Wall Street correspondent, Goodman was also a weekly financial analyst on NBC News at Sunrise for 9 years and a daily financial commentator on the Mutual Broadcasting Network for 8 years. His frequent speeches, workshops, and media guest appearances around the country keep him in touch with consumers’ and investors’ financial interests. He is the author of Everyone’s Money Book, now in its third edition, as well as the coauthor of Barron’s Dictionary of Finance and Investment Terms and Barron’s Finance and Investment Handbook. Goodman is the creator of a multimedia personal finance education package, The Money Answers Program, and publishes a weekly newsletter, Money Answers Now!, at his Web site.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Credit has become indispensable to everyday life in the United States. To some people, it is a convenience; to others, a necessity. Whatever your attitude toward credit and loans, the subject is hard to ignore. If you take control of your credit obligations, you can increase your wealth, cut your taxes, and buy what you need when you need it without paying a king’s ransom in interest. On the other hand, if you relinquish control of your credit obligations and let your debts mount, interest payments can consume a disproportionate amount of your disposable income. The choice is yours.
Credit provides the ability to buy something now, when you lack cash, and pay for it later. Whether you purchase a small toy or a large house, the principle remains the same. For the convenience of obtaining the item on credit, you must pay a fee called interest. Think of interest as rent on money you borrow from a lender, whether that is a bank, credit union, savings and loan, or retail store. When you have the cash to pay off the loan, either in a lump sum or over an extended period of time, you can stop paying "rent" (until you borrow again).
The ability to buy something with an instant loan is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, it is a privilege to take home something of value without having the cash to pay for it. On the other hand, it creates an obligation to pay the debt. The longer you take to pay off the loan, the more it will cost you in interest. Because it is so tempting to say "charge it" and to worry about the bills later, proper use of credit requires more self-discipline than do many other areas of personal finance. In general, you should borrow when you must finance the purchase of something that will grow in value over time, such as a house or a college education. The worst things to finance include items that are consumed quickly—such as food or vacations—and worst of all, other debts.
Credit has become so ingrained in the American consumer’s psyche that it is hard to imagine our lives without it. For example, you would find it difficult to check into a hotel, rent a car, or buy an airline ticket without a credit card. You probably could not afford a home without taking on a mortgage. And you might never make it through the Christmas season without charging your purchases on your retail store accounts and paying for the gifts over the next several months. Yet many people who have abused their borrowing privileges find themselves cut off from the normal world of commerce because they no longer qualify for credit.
Resist thinking of your credit as simply a tool that can help you make purchases or prohibit you from making them. Whether you know it or not, your credit is an accepted gauge of your financial stability—and credibility in general—not only among home equity lenders, mortgage lenders, and additional credit providers, but also those who don’t directly grant you a line of credit—such as your employer, potential landlord, or insurer. While your credit history cannot legally be held against you by a potential employer, it can color how your employer views your stability as an employee. And landlords reviewing potential tenants for their rental properties will often let a healthy credit report cast the deciding vote. Insurance companies can set your premium based on your credit rating. Demonstrating that you have the ability to meet your financial obligations on time—all the time—can help you make the most of your personal and professional life.
Everyone’s Money Book on Credit will help you understand not only the implications of having good—or bad—credit, it will help you maximize the benefits your good credit can bring. Or, if you’ve approached—or crossed—the danger line of poor credit, it will help you start on the road to rebuilding it. This book gives you access to the same information about you that your lenders do. Learn all you can about your credit and how to make the most of it.
Everyone’s Money Book on Credit would not have been possible without the hard work of finance writer Andrea Bennett, who expertly pulled together the threads of this book into a wonderful and comprehensive resource on everything you need to know about credit.


