The money class Learn to create your new American dream

Suze Orman

Book - 2011

Suze Orman, the woman millions of Americans have turned to for financial advice, delivers a master class on personal finance and teaches her readers that the "New American Dream" is not the things they accumulate, but the confidence that comes from knowing that which they've worked so hard for cannot be taken away from them.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Spiegel & Grau 2011.
Language
English
Main Author
Suze Orman (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
xiv, 281 p. ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781400069736
  • How to Enter The Classroom
  • Class 1. The New American Dream
  • Making Change
  • The Dreams of Tomorrow Reside in Today's Choices
  • The Money Class Curriculum
  • Class 2. Stand In Your Truth
  • Lesson 1. Finding Your Truth: A Personal Financial Accounting
  • Lesson 2. Living Truthfully: How To Stand Tall In Your Reality
  • Focus on What Is Real Today... and What You Will Need Tomorrow
  • Live Below Your Means but Within Your Needs
  • The Pleasure of Saving Is Equal to the Pleasure of Spending
  • Define Yourself by Who You Are, Not What You Have
  • Lesson 3. The Foundation Of All Truthful Living: The Power Of Cash
  • Debit Card Rules
  • The "Life Happens" Fund
  • Credit Unions: A Great Place to Save
  • Safety First with Your Savings
  • Saving for Big-Ticket Items
  • The Truth Will Indeed Set You Free
  • Class 3. Family
  • Lesson 1. How to Build Honest Family Relations
  • Opening the Lines of Communication
  • Lesson 2. How To Raise Young Children To Stand In The Truth
  • Your Priceless Legacy
  • Set the Right Tone
  • Imparting Good Values When It Comes to Money
  • Money Lessons for Children
  • Money Lessons for Tweens and Teens
  • Money Lessons for Teenagers Heading to College
  • How to Handle Money Gifts and Savings
  • The Three-Option Approach
  • Lesson 3. How To Create a Financially Honest College Strategy
  • Who Should Save for College
  • The Best Way to Save for College: 529 Plans
  • UGMA/UTMA
  • Coverdell Accounts
  • How to Invest Your 529 Plan
  • The College Talk Every Parent Must Have with a High School Freshman
  • Borrowing Rules for College Loans
  • The Risks of Private Loans for College
  • Stafford Loans
  • PLUS Loans
  • How to Choose the Right School
  • Lesson 4. How To Help Adult Children Facing Financial Challenges
  • How to Handle Student Loans That Are in Default
  • How and When to Help Independent Children Who Are in Financial Trouble
  • Lesson 5. The Conversation Every Adult Child Should Have With His Or Her Parents
  • Building Family Financial Security Under One Roof
  • Updating Legal Documents
  • When a Parent Remarries
  • Lesson 6. Advice For Grandparents: How to Build a Lasting Legacy
  • Follow the Parents' Lead
  • Pay It Forward
  • Give Experiences, Not Things
  • Class 4. Home
  • Lesson 1. The Truth About Home Values
  • A Decade of Extremes
  • A Home Is a Savings Account, Not a Hot Stock
  • Financing Is Cheap, but Not Easy
  • Lesson 2. When It Makes Sense To Rent
  • The Math of Rent vs. Buy
  • Advice for Owners Who Now Want to Rent
  • Lesson 3. The New Rules Of Buying a Home
  • Set a Budget That Satisfies Your Needs
  • Know Your Income Limits
  • Aim to Make a 20% Down Payment
  • A Special Note About FHA-Insured Loans
  • Special Rules for Buying Condos and Co-ops
  • Where to Come Up with the Down Payment
  • Opt for a 30-Year Fixed-Rate Mortgage
  • Understand the Risk of Distressed Property
  • Lesson 4. What To Do If You Are Underwater
  • If You Are Underwater and Cannot Afford Your Mortgage
  • Loan Modificaiton
  • Short Sale
  • Foreclosure
  • If You Are Underwater but You Can Afford the Mortgage
  • Lesson 5. How To Reduce Mortgage Costs
  • When It Makes Sense to Pay Off a Loan Ahead of Schedule
  • The New Realities of Refinancing
  • Refinancing Rules
  • Lower Your Mortgage Costs Without a Refinance
  • Lesson 6. The Dangers Of Home Equity Lines Of Credit
  • The Dangers of Rising Interest Rates and Falling Behind on Payments
  • Home Equity Loans
  • Lesson 7. Reverse Mortgages
  • Reverse Mortgage Basics
  • Lesson 8. Investing In Real Estate
  • What You Need to Know Before You Buy Investment Property
  • What to Do with an Investment Property That Is Underwater
  • Class 5. Career
  • Lesson 1. Advice For The Employed
  • Build Your Plan-for-the-Worst Fund
  • Live Below Today's Means
  • Grab Your Full Retirement Bonus
  • Make Your Case for a Raise and Promotion Through Your Work
  • How to Ask for a Raise
  • Change Your Attitude Before You Change Your Job
  • Lesson 2. Advice For The Unemployed
  • Cut Your Spending Immediately
  • Do Not Dip into Your Retirement Savings
  • Make Sure Your Credit Profile Remains Strong
  • Do Not Go Back to School to Avoid a Hard Job Market
  • Get to Work as Fast as Possible, Rather Than Holding Out for a Better Offer
  • How to Deal with a Steep Pay Cut
  • A Special Note for Stay-at-Home Moms
  • Lesson 3. Starting (And Running) Your Own Business
  • Launching a Business: Can You Afford It?
  • Where to Get the Money to Start Your Business
  • A Few Words About Micro Lending
  • Running Your Own Business
  • When to Expand
  • When to Close
  • Standing in Your Truth in Business
  • Closing Down a Business Responsibly
  • A Note About the Retirement Classes
  • The Money Navigator: A Special Offer for Readers of The Money Class
  • Class 6. Retirement Planning: Getting Going In Your 20S And 30S
  • Lesson 1. Time Is Your Greatest Asset
  • Getting Started Early
  • With Lower Returns, Savings Are More Important Than Ever
  • Lesson 2. Retirement Accounts Explained
  • Retirement Plans Offered by Employers
  • Retirement Plan Withdrawal Rules
  • Non-Workplace Retirement Accounts
  • Nondeductible IRAs
  • Roth IRAs
  • Retirement Plans for the Self-Employed
  • Lesson 3. How Much You Need To Save For Retirement
  • The Retirement Formula
  • The Best 401(k) and IRA Strategy
  • A Word on Vesting
  • Where to Open an IRA Account
  • Lesson 4. Investing Your Retirement Money
  • The Ups and Downs of the Stock Market
  • Dollar Cost Averaging
  • How Much to Invest in Stocks
  • Choosing the Best Options Within Your 401(k)
  • How to Build the Best 401(k) Investment Portfolio
  • Exchange Traded Funds
  • Bond Investments
  • Retirement Planning Mistakes to Avoid
  • What to Do with Your 401(k) When You Leave a Job
  • Class 7. Retirement Planning: Fine-Tuning It In Your 40S And 50S
  • Lesson 1. Deciding When It Makes Sense To Pay Off Your Mortgage
  • Questions to Ask Yourself
  • The Benefits of Paying Off Your Mortgage
  • How to Pay Off Your Mortgage Ahead of Schedule
  • Lesson 2. Have A Realistic Plan For Working Until Age 66-67
  • Your Work-Longer Game Plan
  • Lesson 3. Delay Your Social Security Benefit
  • Social Security Basics
  • Social Security Strategies
  • Lesson 4. Estimate Your Retirement Income: How Are You Doing?
  • Social Security Benefits
  • Retirement Accounts
  • Pensions
  • Lump Sum vs. Annuity
  • Lesson 5. Saving More, And Investing Strategies In Your 50S
  • How to Invest Smart
  • Making the Most of What You Have
  • Best Investments Outside Your 401(k)
  • Bond Investments
  • No Target Funds Allowed
  • Lesson 6. Plan For Long-Term Care Costs
  • When to Buy
  • Making the Financial Case for LTC Insurance
  • Health Insurance, Medicare, and Medicaid
  • LTC Basics
  • Class 8. Living In Retirement
  • Lesson 1. Home Finances: Stand In The Truth Of What Is Affordable For You
  • The Affordability Issue
  • Start the Discussion
  • Lesson 2. Coping With The High Cost Of Healthcare In Retirement
  • Rising Costs vs. Your Annual Retirement Income
  • Long-Term Care Premium Increases
  • Lesson 3. Stick To a Sustainable Withdrawal Rate
  • The Right Rate
  • How to Make Tax-Smart Withdrawals
  • Lesson 4. Avoid Long-Term Bonds And Bond Funds
  • What You Must Understand About Bonds
  • How to Build a Bond Ladder
  • Beyond Treasury Bonds: Municipal Bonds and Corporate Bonds
  • Lesson 5. Earn Higher Yields by Investing In Dividend-Paying ETFS And Stocks
  • The Case for Dividend-Paying ETFs and Stocks
  • Stock Dividend Basics
  • The Protection of a Stop-Loss Order
  • How Much to Invest
  • How to Choose a Dividend-Focused ETF
  • Tips for Owning Individual Dividend-Paying Stocks
  • Lesson 6. Double-Check Your Beneficiaries And Must-Have Documents
  • Life-Changing Events
  • Class 9. The Ultimate Lesson
  • Clearing My Own Roadblocks
  • The Road Ahead, Not the Rearview Mirror
  • The Legacy We Create
Review by Booklist Review

New economic times demand new economic strategies. In her tenth book, Orman deals some hard and sobering truths to readers, truths she had difficulty embracing. The parameters remain the same. She talks about home, job and career, family, retirement, and spending. Yet the advice often differs dramatically from that of previous books. She begins each section with hard-edged facts; for example, if unemployment hits you, be prepared to accept a job, almost any job, at a lower salary level than before. Do not wait for the best job; take the best option that you have today. Pay off your mortgage before retiring. Delay Social Security benefits at least until the government's full retirement age. And so on. Sidebars lend detailed insight to chapters on topics including life insurance as the ultimate gesture of love, the risks of private college loans, and questions condo buyers need to ask. It's a very straightforward but still optimistic message that Orman's delivering: Live below your means but within your needs. High-Demand Backstory: Orman's new book will be given a publicity blitz of enormous proportions, which could even include billboards.--Jacobs, Barbara Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With a clarion call to "stand in your truth," Orman (The Money Book for the Young, Fabulous & Broke) re-engineers much of the advice given in her previous works for her latest volume. Chock full of financial advice pertinent to the post-2008 economic landscape, the book addresses every age and stage of life. Organized into nine "classes," with each class/chapter further divided into related lessons, Orman's effort is characteristically upbeat and no-nonsense, offering lessons on family matters, homeownership, saving for college, emergencies, retirement, and more. Orman firmly guides readers when dealing with parenting issues or underwater mortgages. Orman declares herself "vehemently anti-allowance," opting instead for paying children to do household chores, and she explains how to implement such a policy. A class on careers gives honest advice for anyone facing continued unemployment or thinking of taking a lower paying position. And three of her classes focus on financial planning for the future and how readers as young as 20 can begin saving for retirement. After finishing Orman's book, and completing her exercises, readers will have a very clear sense of how they can achieve what she has rechristened the "New American Dream." (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


THE NEW AMERICAN DREAM   The American Dream. As a concept, it is so ingrained in our collective imagination that it doesn't even need to be defined, right? Think about it: Did you ever need to have it explained to you? My guess is you did not and that even from a young age, you, like me, knew it represented a promise--of opportunity, of possibility--that came with being American.   But on closer inspection, it is not just an American impulse that the American Dream describes, it is a human one, and it unites us. No matter your socioeconomic, ethnic, or religious background, we all aspire to the same things: We seek to provide for our family and keep them safe, no matter what shape that family takes, no matter if we are talking about our parents or our children, a blended family or a family "by choice," not blood. We want future generations to have even more opportunity than we ourselves have, a dream that is intrinsically linked with education and the advancement that follows from it. We want to live in a home that is secure in every sense--as a haven for our loved ones and as a wise place to have spent our money. We want the guarantee that our hard work will pay off, that it will support us financially, that it will allow us to achieve our goals, and that when it is time to stop working, we will reap the benefits of those years of dedicated service and live out the rest of our lives comfortably in retirement.   As universal as these desires are, we refer to them as the American Dream because for centuries this country has, for the most part, been able to make good on this promise of America as the land of opportunity. This belief has played a defining role in shaping our national psyche. It is at the heart of our Declaration of Independence--that we each possess "certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness."   How truly terrifying, then, to take stock of the American Dream today and to question the truth of it--to wonder if it still exists in reality or if it has become an illusion, a myth. Take a look around: As of October 2011, nearly 14 million Americans were out of work; another 8.9 million were working only part-time because they cannot find full-time employment. That is nearly 23 million people who are struggling to make ends meet. Many of those lucky enough to still be employed in their 60s are looking to hang on to their jobs as long as possible because they simply cannot afford to retire--which also means there are fewer job openings for young people entering the workforce.   In many areas of the country, the dream of homeownership has backfired. Real estate values have deflated to such an extent that a record number of people owe more than their homes are worth. That's not an American Dream--it's a nightmare.   Because of the dire economic conditions of recent years, many parents are unable to afford the high cost of college tuition for their children. And there is a record number of student loans in default, making people question whether they ever should have taken them on to begin with.   The sum total of all these facts and figures? The home, the job security, the education, the retirement--the very standard of living that all of us took for granted for so long is completely under siege.   Whether we speak about it or not, we are grappling with the frightening possibility, the fear, that we no longer live in a land where effort applied to opportunity produces a better life. The doors leading to more and greater things, once wide open, now seem to be closing. It is hard to move up in an economy where there has been no job or wage growth over the past decade. Once a manufacturing powerhouse--"Made in the U.S.A." was our calling card--we have ceded that engine of growth, and the jobs that go with it, to other countries as our own economy now relies on our ability to consume, not produce.   The impact of these economic shifts has been felt deeply within our homes. While the median household income for adults born in the 1960s is indeed higher than the income of their parents' generation, much of that is a function of smaller household size and the fact that there are now likely two wage earners per household. It takes more of us working more to maintain our forward progress. Even so, the pace of our growth has slowed considerably. According to a study commissioned by the Pew Charitable Trusts, family income doubled in the postwar years, between 1947 and 1973, but in the three decades since then the increase has been a mere 20%. That statistic provides important context to why household debt relative to income more than doubled over the same period: For many, borrowing was a way to keep up with our parents and grandparents. To put it in more emotional terms, it is why so many of us wonder how our parents and grandparents seemed able to enjoy a higher standard of living even though their means were so much less than ours.   The meritocracy that underpins our economy and culture--work hard, move up the ladder--has also been weakening, as the distribution of income has become increasingly uneven. In the 1950s and 1960s, our national economic growth trickled down across a broad spectrum of income levels. Since the 1970s it has been more fractured, with much of the economic gains benefiting upper-income households. This concentration of wealth leaves the middle class, the heart and soul of this country, struggling just to hang on.   The epic financial crisis--and there really is no other way to describe it--that began in 2008 may have delivered a decisive blow to the stubborn optimism that we held on to in spite of the on-the-ground reality of how our financial lives have been marked by increasing struggle. For many, the crisis was a rude awakening; for others, it was a grim confirmation of the creeping anxiety we've been feeling about how we are going to make it all work. Either way, it is hard to find a family that was untouched by this financial disaster. It was a galvanizing moment for us as a nation--it has forced us to reckon with our beliefs in our country and our individual ideals.   Is it time, then, to pronounce the American Dream dead?   In many ways it pains me to say this, but in my opinion the American Dream as we knew it is dead.   But listen to me: That is not such a bad thing. The old American Dream has been in need of revision for quite some time; we have just been very good at avoiding that truth. It's time to take that dream back into our hands and reshape it. It's time to create a New American Dream that is based in honesty, authenticity, good intentions, and genuine need.   What is important to understand is that the American Dream is not something to put your faith in, to pray for, to embrace blindly, and hope that everything turns out okay--despite its long, dependable run. Rather, it is a concept, a loose set of goals that beg for individualization. The American Dream was never one-size-fits-all. The New American Dream asks you to fashion a dream that suits you--not one based on false premises and the expectations of others. It asks you to take measure of your own needs and understand what it will take to provide for yourself and those around you--your family, your community, and those less fortunate.   The truth is, we are on the threshold of an important moment. We can come together, right here, right now, and each one of us can envision our own New American Dream--a dream that is rooted in reality, not superficiality; in truth and integrity, not illusion and falsehood.   MAKING CHANGE   I am a great believer in the power of perspective. Often when we find ourselves in a difficult situation we come to believe we have no options. We convince ourselves there is no way out. Despair and frustration take root and convince us that things are more desperate than they may actually be. When I've found myself in those situations in my own life, I have learned that a change in perspective can change everything. What seemed insurmountable can be overcome. Not without difficulty, but through ingenuity and dedication. We can make a difference when we think differently. If you have any doubt about the truth of that statement, think of any significant achievement throughout American history, from our founding as a nation built on those inalienable rights and freedoms, to the civil rights movement.   What we need first and foremost then, to erase the feelings of hopelessness and to ease our fears, is a change in perspective. Let us recognize what the American Dream no longer is, in order to give birth to a New American Dream.   We must abandon any vestige of the old dream that suggested it was delivered on a silver platter as a matter of national birthright, and that our economy would forever be the rising tide that lifts all boats. The dream I am asking you to create--this New American Dream--is a very individualistic pursuit. It calls upon you to take stock of the challenges we face as a nation with an economy that is still struggling to recover from the effects of a crippling recession. And then it calls upon you to take stock of your own life, your own needs, your own security. We must transform ourselves from dreaming society's dreams and putting our faith in a false and misleading sense of entitlement, to being a society where each of us strives for dreams that are personal and realistic and that are in the best interests--in the truest and most honest sense--of us and our family. I am calling upon each of us to rethink the very way we dream. Excerpted from The Money Class: Learn to Create Your New American Dream by Suze Orman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.