Basics


If you’re new here, you may want to learn what this site is about. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!This is a guest post from Bob at ChristianPF.com. Bob writes about personal finance from a Christian perspective.

John D. Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil company in 1870. He was [...]

[read all of Richer Than Rockefeller: Putting Wealth in Perspective]

My friend Albert — age four — loves electricity. Ever since he was young (ha!) he’s been fascinated by the stuff. His parents have carefully nurtured his hobby. Now that Albert’s older, they’ve decided this might be a good way to teach him about money. In this guest post from my friend Lisa, she describes [...]

[read all of Saving with Albert: Teaching a Four-Year-Old the Value of Money]

This piece originally appeared at Andrea’s Consultant Journal in a slightly different format.
Exercise is a funny thing. When you start a fitness regimen, you feel awful, especially if it’s been months (or years) since you’ve been physically active. The first couple of weeks can be grueling. But once you make it a habit, once you [...]

[read all of A Rather Obvious Metaphor for Personal Finance Couched in a True Story About Physical Fitness]

The problem with the standard financial advice is that it’s bad advice. You’ve been told to work hard, save money, get out of debt, live below your means, and invest in a well-diversified portfolio of mutual funds. But this advice is obsolete — so argues Robert Kiyosaki in his new book, Rich Dad’s Increase Your [...]

[read all of Robert Kiyosaki: Increase Your Financial IQ]

On Tuesday evening I gave my first-ever presentation about personal finance. I spoke to a group of about 70 graduating seniors from Western Oregon University. My talk went okay. It wasn’t terrible, but it certainly wasn’t good. It’s a start. I learned a lot, and I’ll do better next time.
I was the fourth and final [...]

[read all of Life After School: Advice for New Graduates]

Tomorrow I’ll be giving a short presentation about personal finance to a group of seniors at Western Oregon University. I’ll begin by providing a brief version of my own post-college financial failures, but I want to spend most of the talk providing two or three great take-aways that these young adults can put to use [...]

[read all of Ask the Readers: Advice for College Grads?]

This article is part of Financial Literacy Month.
Most Americans receive a daily flood of junk mail. Some savvy citizens take a stand against the torrent. My friend Pam gets great delight from calling the sender of every catalog she receives in order to be removed from their mailing lists. This works well, but there are [...]

[read all of How to Stop Junk Mail in Its Tracks]

Soon after I started this site two years ago, Bloomberg Press sent me several books to review. I thumbed through them, but then put them on my shelf and forgot about them. Recently, while researching diversification, I pulled down one of these forgotten volumes, Kathy Kristof’s Investing 101. I started reading the diversification chapter, then [...]

[read all of Book Review: Investing 101]

Here’s a short-film produced by General Motors in 1939 called “Round & Round”. It’s a brief look at the free market system. It feels like it was produced for first-graders:
This is a factory. This is a machine in the factory. This is the workman who tends the machine in the factory. And this is what [...]

[read all of Round & Round: Capitalist Propaganda from 1939]

April is Financial Literacy Month, during which Get Rich Slowly is exploring the fundamentals of personal finance.
I don’t know much about stocks. I’ve read some books about traders (Den of Thieves, for example), and I understand the rudiments of the stock market itself, but I don’t know anything about the language of stocks. I don’t [...]

[read all of Saving and Investing: An Introduction to Stock Valuation]

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