Finance Chapter 3

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what can provide information for your cash flow statement?

a checking account

real estate

a home, condo, vacation property,or other land that a family owns

mortgage

amount borrowed to buy a house or other real estate that will be repaid over 15, 20, or 30 years

liabilities

amounts owed to others

an alternative for a person in a state of insolvency?

bankruptcy

step 3 of the budgeting process

budgeting an emergency fund and savings

step 4 of the budgeting process

budgeting fixed expenses

step 5 of the budgeting process

budgeting variable expenses

how should you determine income?

by including money youre SURE you will receive

personal posessions

cars and other personal belongings (major portion of assets for most people). these may be harder to convert to cash

liquid assets

cash and items of value that can easily be converted to cash

assets

cash and other tangible property with a monetary value

the outflows?

checks written out to people

step 3 of the balance sheet

computing your net worth

2 types of liabilities

current and long term

market value means what

current value

money management

day to day financial activities necessary to manage current personal economic resources while working toward long term financial security

long term liabilities

debts you don't have to pay in full until more than a year from now. like auto loans, education loans, mortgages

current liabilities

debts you have to pay within a short time, usually in a year. include stuff like medical bills, insurance premiums, etc

negative

deficit

what makes up this part of the budget?

definite obligations, like life insurance

in the checking account, what would be the inflows?

deposits to the account

step 3 of cash flow statement

determine net cash flow

step 2 of a balance sheet

determining amounts owed

budget variance

difference between the amount budgeted and the actual amount received or spent

net worth

difference between your total assets and total liabilities

step 2 of the budgeting process

estimating income

variable expenses

flexible payments that change from month to month

investment assets

funds set aside for long term financial needs like financing their kids education

where are most financial records kept

home file, safe deposit box, or home computer

when does a deficit exist

if more cash goes out than comes in

insolvency

inability to pay debts when they are due

example of inflow

income from employment

income

inflows of cash for an individual or a household

net worth is not what?

it is not money available for use, it is an indication of your financial position

formula for net worth (your wealth)

items of value (what you own) - amounts owed (what you owe) = net worth

after establishing spending plan, what do you do?

keep records of your actual income and expenses, like an income statement

what should a home file be used for

keeping records of current needs and documents with limited value

step 1 of creating balance sheet

listing items of value

what do personal financial statements do?

measure progress, maintain info about financial activities

discretionary income

money left over after paying for housing, food, and other necessities

balance sheet also called what

net worth statement

example of outflow

payments for items like rent, food and loans

fixed expenses

payments that dont vary much month to month like rent or tv fees

personal financial statements: which 2 documents?

personal balance sheet and cash flow statement

cash flow statement also called what

personal income and expenditure statement

take home pay (net pay)

persons earnings after deductions for taxes and other items, also called disposable income

safe deposit box

private storage area at a financial institution with maximum security for valuables and hard to replace documents

step 2 of cash flow statement

record cash outcome

step 1 of cash flow statement

record income

step 6 of the budgeting process

recording spending amounts

Cash flow statement

records where your money is going

balance sheet

reports what an individual or a family owns and owes

step 7 of the budgeting process

reviewing spending and saving patterns

where should important financial records and valuable articles be kept? things like annual stock investment, contracts, list of insurance policies(more security than a home file)

safe deposit box

step 1 of the budgeting process

setting financial goals

budgeting helps with what

skilled money managing, live within your income, spend money wisely, etc

what EXACTLY is a liability?

something that you owe now, not something you may owe in the future

budget (spending plan)

specific plan for spending income

cash flow statement is what

summary of cash receipts and payments for a given period, such as a month or a year

positive

surplus

cash flow

the actual inflow and outflow of cash during a given time period

deficit

the amount by which actual spending exceeds planned spending

surplus

the amount by which actual spending is less than planned spending

what makes up this part?

things like food clothes etc, for many people this is where they spend the most

process for preparing a cash flow statement

total cash received during the time period - cash outflows during the time period = cash surplus or cash deficit (depending on spending)

money management should be what?

well planned, realistic, flexible and clearly communicated

net worth is what exactly

what you would have left if all your assets were sold for the listed values and all your debts were paid fully back

when does insolvency occur?

when a persons liabilities far exceed available assets

financial goals should

SMART acronym

example of a common budgeting period

1 month, since many payments are due monthly

3 major money management activities

1. store and maintain personal financial records and documents 2. create personal financial statements (balance sheets and cash flow statements of income and outflow) 3. creating and implementing a plan for spending and saving (budgeting)

experts suggest your emergency fund be for how long?

3-6 months, but if its unrealistic try having about 1 month


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