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All Press Releases for January 23, 2004 Subscribe to this News Feed     Subscribe to this Podcast Feed  
 

Is Your Savings Account Keeping You Broke? Take This Simple Quiz and Find Out!

Fiancial Educator Proves Your Savings Account May Be Doing More Harm Than Good.

(PRWEB) January 23, 2004 --Even though low interest rates are good when you want to get a loan, they are bad for people with savings accounts.

In this economy your best investment, the best place to put your money is into paying off debts. Think of it as investing in your debt because that is exactly what you are doing.

Answer the following questions:

1. What interest rate does your savings account
pay you per year?

2. List the interest rates of all your debts.

3. Are the interest rates on any of your debts
higher than your savings account?

If yes, you are unlikely to get ahead financially by having that savings account.

If you put $1,000 into a bank savings account earning 2%, at the end of a year you will have $1,020.

If you carry a $1,000 balance on a credit card with a 19% interest rate, and you pay the minimum monthly payments, at the end of one year you will have paid approximately $190 in interest.

If you get $1,000 in a tax refund, small inheritance or from somewhere else you now have a choice to make. You can earn 20 bucks in a savings account or save $190 by paying off that credit card. Keep in mind that your 20 bucks is taxable income so you'll be left with $15 or so after taxes.

Do you need a savings account for emergencies? That savings account may be causing those emergencies! Think about it this way...

If you are earning money in a savings account at 2% and paying anything over 2% on your debts you are sliding backwards financially and you'll never get ahead. It's basic mathematics.

If you earn 20 bucks for five years in your savings account you'll have $100. If you pay $190 in interest on your $1,000 credit card after five years you will have paid $950 in interest charges.

In other words you have wasted, lost, burned or flushed $850 by having a savings account. ($950 - $100 = $850) OUCH!

What can you do? Pay off that credit card and use that as your emergency fund. It's not the best way to do it but it's better than earning 2% and paying anything over 2%.

So, while the stock market is on it's roller coaster and the economy is challenged your best investment, bar none, is your debts! Get them paid off!
###
Leo J. Quinn, Jr. is a financial educator from the Albany, NY area. For the last seven years he has been showing people how they can get completely out of debt (including a mortgage) in under 10 years. He has been stunning audiences by showing them that paying off their highest interest rates debts first and/or paying extra on more than one debt is the SLOWEST way to get rid of those debts.

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Leo J. Quinn, Jr.
518-885-7355
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