Getty The Covid-19 pandemic is causing people to re-learn an important financial lesson. Perhaps this time more people will remember it than usually do, because the lesson can prevent substantial declines in wealth and reduce stress and worry over the years. The lesson is that about every 10 to 15 years we experience an event
Retirement
Workers protest (Photo by VALERIE MACON / AFP) (Photo by VALERIE MACON/AFP via Getty Images) AFP via Getty Images As the nation the moves into an uncertain and wobbly relationship with the Covid-19 virus, it would be both just and smart to pay more to essential workers for risking their lives in the field. Hazard
Getty Many people relate to 401(k) and 403(b) plans, which feature optional employer matching contributions. (There are other plan types such as the SIMPLE plan, which offers an employer match, which we are leaving out of this article.) Some employees say that if the company does not match their contribution, they simply won’t save. But
©hd3dsh – stock.adobe.com Personalizing your response to 2020’s Bear Markets, Recession, Pandemic and the rest of the hurdles to building and protecting wealth It’s just another lazy summer in the midst of a boring, nondescript year. Oh, wait, that was last year’s message at this time. 2020 has been a time of great adjustment for
Getty The Department of Labor announced on June 3rd that retail 401(k)s and other defined contribution plans would now be able to invest in private equity funds as a part of a diversified asset allocation fund, such as a target-date fund. The ruling allows for the plan fiduciary to allocate assets to a private equity
Do you believe Donald Trump is a “prudent man” capable of rationally, intelligently managing your … [+] pension, your 401k and your health care? Like it or not, he’s making unprecedented decisions that undermine the financial security and health of Americans. Getty Regardless of whether you love or hate him, do you believe Donald Trump
By Sherri Snelling, Next Avenue Contributor Getty When Harvard Business School published its 2019 Caring Companies report, finding that 3 out of 4 employees are also caregivers, the researchers couldn’t have predicted that the workplace caregiving crisis was about to collide with the coronavirus crisis. Nor that the combination would accelerate a sea change in
By Sarah McKinney Gibson, Next Avenue Contributor John Frick and students Courtesy of John Frick While the pandemic has put in-person mentoring on indefinite hold, a growing number of older adults are finding virtual ways to make and broaden meaningful intergenerational connections. Here are five of their stories: Ervan Caesar: Mentoring Teens in the Youth
Getty Everyone’s talking about a “second stimulus,” it seems, these days. Here’s CBS News: “there are signs the White House may get behind additional stimulus funding, with the Wall Street Journal reporting that the administration is working on its own plan. During a press conference last week to discuss unemployment, President Donald Trump said his
TOPLINE The market opened lower on Friday, with stocks taking a hit from the Federal Reserve’s latest bank stress test results and a new record number of daily coronavirus cases in the United States. Wall Street remains worried about a spike in new cases across the country. Spencer Platt/Getty Images KEY FACTS The Dow Jones