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Your Money Milestones: A Guide to Making the 9 Most Important Financial Decisions of Your Life
by Moshe A. Milevsky

Your Money Milestones: A Guide to Making the 9 Most Important Financial Decisions of Your Life
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Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5

Binding: Paperback
Feature: ISBN13: 9780137029105
ISBN: 0137029101
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 224
Publication Date: 2010-01-17
Publisher: FT Press

Features
ISBN13: 9780137029105
Condition: New
Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Editorial Reviews:

A Whole New Way to Look at Your Money…and Make It Grow!

 

“Here is a lively new guide that offers fresh and actionable ways to approach everyday financial problems. Whether you’re rich or just getting by, starting your career or winding down, you’ll benefit from the author’s insightful observations and suggestions—all delivered with warmth and wit.”

—Evan Cooper, Deputy Editor, InvestmentNews

 

“The author’s unique gift is to make complex ideas from the world of high finance simple to understand, and his new book gently coaches readers in how to think about their personal finances. Best of all, readers can use Milevsky’s financial calculators online to test these ideas, so they can make choices with confidence. Investing in this book might be the wisest financial decision you make this year.”

—Gil Weinreich, Editor, Research Magazine

 

“The author has accomplished the near impossible. He has made the complicated, confusing, and often contradictory world of personal financial planning easy to understand. More importantly, he’s made it easy to act on his ground-breaking advice and guidance and has made it easy for readers to address their most important financial decisions in a thoughtful, practical, and painless manner.”

— Robert Powell, Editor, Retirement Weekly and Retirement Columnist, www.MarketWatch.com/retirement

 

“What are the nine crucial financial decisions every person must make over the course of a lifetime? If you don’t know, read this book. The author’s nine choices revolve around his core concept of human capital and how it must be gradually converted to financial capital to achieve a successful retirement.”

—Jonathan Chevreau, National Post Columnist and Author of Findependence Day

 

Your Money Milestones helps just about anyone see life’s most important money decisions in a fresh and completely rational light. If you want a smart, practical roadmap to a financially sound future, you need this book.”

—Eric Schurenberg, Editor-in-Chief, BNET

 

Your Money Milestones illustrates how four principles inspired by basic arithmetic can be applied to manage the most important financial decisions (money milestones) people face over their entire financial lifecycles.


  • Addition: Identify the true value all of your financial resources.
  • Subtraction: Budget for the hidden liabilities in your future.
  • Division: Spend your total resources evenly over time.
  • Multiplication: Prepare for many alternative and unexpected universes.


This book offers a complete framework for thinking about money that’s every bit as provocative as Freakonomics. Drawing on the newest research into psychology and personal finance, Milevsky helps you identify the true value all of your resources; budget for hidden liabilities in your future; plan to spend your total resources smoothly over time; and prepare for unexpected events that could upend even the most careful planning. You’ll discover why children are short-term investment liabilities but may be long-term pension assets, why winning the lottery may increase your chances of going bankrupt, and why giving up control of your retirement nest egg might actually make you happier. The insights are fascinating and useful throughout your life whether you're deciding what to study, contemplating your first home purchase, deciding whether to keep contributing to your 401(k), or considering when and whether to retire.




Featured Customer Reviews:

Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5 Personal Finance from a Different Perspective
Your Money Milestones is a good book about some of the many important financial decisions that individuals make at different stages in their life. It offers different approaches to personal finance that emphasize human capital, smoothing of earnings, improved net worth, etc.

Personal finance books are one of my more common reads and no matter what knowledge level I feel I have achieved, I still like to read more books on this subject, both to discover different perspectives and hone my skills. This particular book is a little different from the rest. It doesn't dispense practical advice as much as other personal finance books and in many ways, it is more a behavioral guide than anything. For this reason, it will likely turn off some readers. Many will open the book and immediately look for direct advice, but this is not that type of finance book. It is intended more as an overview of ways to approach the subject of personal finance from a new perspective.

Looking at the nine different money milestones presented in this book, I find that I agree with most of them, but I have reservations with others. One is the emphasis on future human capital. The book recommends creating a personal balance sheet to calculate net worth with the inclusion of what the book claims is your largest asset- your human capital. This futuristic number, which represents the discounted value of your future potential for earnings, will greatly increase current net worth, but I question the author's wisdom on this matter. To list this as an asset would imply that I can sell it, but future paychecks and future work cannot be sold. Another reason I don't like this concept is because it greatly inflates one's personal balance sheet. This could give individuals a false sense of security and lead them to make poor decisions regarding investment and debt management, due to their inflated level of net worth.

What I like best about this book are its chapters on topics such as education, kids, and marriage because they offer some fresh and interesting perspectives on these subjects. The education chapter is good because it offers some factual information on the value of an education and the tremendous impact it can make on one's financial potential. The chapter on kids and marriage is interesting because it offers some financial food for thought about the institution of marriage and child- rearing that many people have likely never considered. What this book says on these important matters could impact many long- held beliefs, and that is what makes them so interesting to read.

Personal finance is an important topic that affects everyone. Your Money Milestones isn't the greatest book on this subject, but it is still a good book with some good things to offer. I can see the author's point about such concepts as human capital, renting vs. owning, etc., but I don't necessarily agree with all of it and I know I am not alone in my thinking. Still, this is a good book and while it may not offer much in the way of personal advice, it is still good for the different angle it takes on the subject.




Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5 Insightful advice
I have read many personal finance types of books before. This is very insightful and discusses uncommon thinking such as "human capital", diversifying risk based on your "human capital", smoothing consumption, etc. Even someone who is well-versed in personal finance will find this book insightful. I just wished that the author gave more details but he did give his website url.

Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5 Not quite what I was expecting
This is more of an overview to make you aware of things to consider, but it lacks practical advice. There is a psychological element which describes people's basic behaviors in certain situations. For example, the receipt of a large sum of money initially goes toward some debt, but people's spending habits ultimately don't change. This was exemplified by looking at lottery winners and military personnel. This might be good for college students to make them more aware of their spending habits, but it's not so good if you're 30 years old looking for advice on how to prepare for retirement.

Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5 Read it Today.....Great Book!
I have read many books on Money management....some good and some bad. This book falls into the very good side. It is an interesting take on money milestones instead of money phrases. Mr. Milevsky approaches money as a whole concept......i.e. your money worth not just actual, concrete assets.

This could be read by any age person. A young person could use it as a blueprint. Middle age could use it to tweek areas to stay on the right path. Older persons could validate and make adjustments, if needed.

I am the middle age part. I found it very useful to validate my money management techniques. Overall, I agree with Mr. Milevsky and his comments.

If you want a solid, well-written, money management book with today's issues used to make points........this is the book for you.

Enjoy.

Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5 Interesting from an academic perspective
This book is not the one to choose if you are looking for practical money advice you can use now. It is essentially a series of the author's academic lessons put into book form. Some of it is very interesting, such as the life value of having children versus the actual cost of having them. Some of it will reach its reader to late in life, such as those with a college degree will do better in life than those without. Well written and interesting for those who enjoy economics.


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