Reflection on Financial Health

 

 

 

Many people find managing their money a difficult task. Their use of credit cards and loans early in their adult years can prevent them from acquiring financial health in their lifetime. It is tempting to spend money you have not yet acquired once you are no longer a student trying to make ends meet.
Be sure to complete the learning content for the Unit 7 topic “Financial Health” and the two referenced activities before attempting to engage in this discussion.
Note: To view the content for an already completed topic, double click on the topic’s circle in the learning map. A new page will appear. Under the Actions area select review from the drop-down options; this will open the topic with content. The practice and quick practice options only offer questions.
Instructions:
• Complete the two financial health activities (The True Cost of a New Car and The True Cost of Credit Card Use) presented in Unit 7 Topic “Financial Health” related to spending money you do not have.
• Share your experience with “The True Cost of a New Car” activity with your peers
o Change the size of the loan, years to pay it back, and the interest rate three (3) to four (4) times.
 Start with the lowest loan amount you might need for your new care and increase by $5000 to $10000 each turn.
 Start with a 3% loan (entered as .03) and increase by one (1) or two (2) percent each turn.
 In each case choose between 5 and 7 years to pay it back.
o Describe one of the monthly payments you would have to make based on your selections.
 Loan amount?
 Interest rate?
 Years to pay it back?
 Monthly payment?
 Total car cost?
o Discuss the potential impact a car payment of that size might have on your monthly budget.
 Describe the other monthly expenses you would have to remove or reduce to make your payments.
 Why Is or isn’t the car worth the sacrifices you might have to make given the size of the monthly payments?
o What other options do you have to avoid taking out a car loan?
• Share your experience with ” The True Cost of Credit Card Use” activity with your peers
o Consider the following scenario:
 You spend an extra $50 a month using a credit card for the first year after graduation to make ends meet.
 The interest rate charged by the credit card company is 18%.
 The minimum payment you are required to send each month is $20.
o Now consider the real cost of that $50 dollars a month by the end of that first year provided to you in the exercise.
 How might the continued use of a credit card to fund an extra $50 of spending per month affect your long-term financial health?
 Describe two ways you could avoid the long-term consequences of spending more than you have on a regular basis.

 

 

 

Sample Solution

st were required to contain Spanish insurgents.” He later describes this effort as “the greatest single contribution that the Spaniards were to make…” The ‘Guerrilla’ or ‘little war’ tactics proved a nightmare to navigate for the French military as General Thiebault later acknowledged when he rendered the scattered situation of the French army desperate. In occupying the vast majority of French forces the Spaniards helped the British to win decisive victories at Talavera in 1809, Fuentes D’onoro in 1811 and Salamanca in 1812 and this contributed greatly to the Peninsula’s liberation and Wellington’s move into southern France. In addition to this there was tremendous variety in the quality of soldiers that Napoleon committed to the Peninsular at various stages of War according to Gates, Baron de Marbot commented that “The moral effect was wholly to our disadvantage ,and as I compared the broad chests and powerful limbs of the Spaniards with those of our weak and weedy privates, my national pride was humbled.” This was in light of the French army’s composition of inexperienced military conscripts, a stark contrast to the composition of the army commanded by Napoleon in the East or at the Battles of Austerlitz and Ulm. The guerrilla nature of war in Spain meant that by the time the war was in full swing Napoleon’s troops who had conquered Austerlitz and Jena previously were now dead. Furthermore “simultaneously, troop quality declined further as veterans suffered some of the nearly 100,000 casualties sustained in the peninsular” (James Arnold) Despite this “No matter how grave affairs became in Spain Napoleon considered them of secondary importance” according to Lachoque. This was illustrated by a letter from Napoleon to his brother Joseph on the 15th of January where he stated “If nothing prevents it, I shall return towards the end of February… The court of Vienna is behaving badly. They shall live to regret it. Don’t worry about anything.” Napoleon’s letter clearly shows how the war in the Peninsular was not of primary importance to him, so much so that he left his brother, an inexperienced military leader in charge which further illustrates how easy the war should have b

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