Personal Financial Statements Vocabulary
budget
A plan for using money to meet wants and needs.
liabilities
Amounts of money owed to others (debts, bills). Liabilities includes only money that you will owe for longer than a month -- example: a phone bill is NOT considered a liability.
wealth
An abundance of material possessions and resources.
surplus
An amount of money remaining after all expenses have been met. Very much like discretionary income.
assets
Anything of value that is owned (cash, property, personal possessions, investments)
personal financial statement
A document that provides information about an individual's current financial position and presents a summary of income and spending.
income
Any money you receive.
personal possessions
Cars and any other valuable belongings that are not real estate.
current liabilities
Debt that needs to be paid off in a year or less.
long term liabilities
Debts that will not be paid off within a year (cars, student loan, mortgage loans.
net worth
Difference between the amount you own & debts you owe
real estate
Land and any buildings on it.
discretionary income
Money left after all bills are paid and necessary items are bought (like food, clothing, shelter).
cash flow
Money that goes in and out of your wallet and bank accounts.
market value
The price at which a property would sell.
deficit
When more money is spent than is earned or received. When your checking account is in deficit the bank calls this "insufficient funds".
liquid assets
cash or items that can be quickly converted to cash
personal balance sheet
(also called a net worth statement) is a financial statement that lists items of value owned, debts owed, and a person's net worth.
insolvency
A financial state that occurs if liabilities are greater than assets.
take-home pay
also called net pay, is a person's earnings after taxes and other items such as insurance and savings are deducted from the paycheck.