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Archive for January, 2009
17.01.09

ROUNDUP: Can’t stop talking about the crisis

- So What Chocnut? -

Sometimes, I wonder when the global financial crunch will no longer be in the headlines…or when a day will pass when we won’t talk about it…or when it won’t be a constant worry anymore.

Just yesterday, I heard that Accenture met with its employees and told 1,000 of them they don’t have to come to work anymore. Just like that. At least two people I personally know were also laid off last week by their company.

You know this would be happening this year. But it doesn’t get more real than when the ax falls on people you know. Heaven forbid one of you gets laid off.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

16.01.09

Philam’s best suitor

- insurance -

I can’t help but compare Philamlife to a lady in the prime of her life who has no choice but to get married to the richest guy around. On one hand, you can’t blame her if she takes her time to choose—and extract the most from the deal. On the other, suitors are sure to throw in the towel if the requirements are too stringent and the price too steep, considering the situation.

Granted, it’s not her chastity that is in question. Her mother is the one who has been too intimate with the underbelly of finance. Still, she needs to raise funds for mummy and fast.

So far, Sunlife Financial has dropped out of the race. So has Government Service Insurance System. Philam was called “arrogant” because of all her posturing. Those that remain are:

[Read the rest of this entry »]

14.01.09

SURVEY: Preparing for kids’ college education

- family finance -

My daughter is so not a baby anymore. She’s taller than I am, wears shoes that are two sizes bigger than mine, raids my closets and wears a lot of the girl stuff she fancies there, and loves teenager music. I don’t mind that, but what mother would not worry about (whispers) the boy stuff?

Lately, I’ve been worried about how to get her through college. Most financial projections assume an 8% tuition fee inflation for college education. If she gets into the University of the Philippines, that means we would need at least P300,000 for tuition for a 4-year course. Add around 80% of that for other expenses like books, clothes, allowance and I roughly expect half a million for a 4-year UP education that starts three years from now.

As you can expect, the figures can get really scary if you’re thinking of an Ateneo or a De La Salle University education. That can easily mean at least P1.5 to P2 million per child. And that’s a conservative estimate.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

13.01.09

Record Keeping: what to keep, what to toss out

- family finance -

In with the new, out with the old–so goes the saying for the New Year. It is also this time of the year when I keep the pack rat in me at bay (at least, I try to) and figure out what financial documents to retain and which things to feed to the shredder.

It’s not the most exciting item in my to-do list. I hate those paper cuts. Plus, I have a problem with letting go…weird as that may sound when we’re just talking about piles of paper!

So, I walked over to our accounting department and picked their brains. Here’s what I came up with:

09.01.09

Lessons from under the Christmas tree

- Holidays, family finance -

It has been more than a week after the crazy rush of Christmas past. That’s ample time to figure out the lessons that can be gleaned from under the Christmas tree.

Which gifts have you truly found enjoyable and useful? Which ones were a waste of money and time? Did the price tag matter? Come on…honestly?

I found myself thinking about these questions as I took down the tree and wondered about my Christmas spending and plans to begin saving for the 2009 holidays. Here are some realizations that surprised me (or maybe they shouldn’t have??):
[Read the rest of this entry »]

07.01.09

SURVEY: Investment strategy for 2009

- Investing -

Long before 2008 drew to a close, people have started writing off 2009 with words such as “worse than 2008”, “depressing”, “bumpy ride” etc.

Is it then still possible to get out of 2009 with a good investment return or is that out of the question and should we all just try to make as little mistake as possible and aim for a boring year of preserving gains?

Specifically, if you are a 20 to 30-something singleton, what do you plan to do this year about your investments? The conventional wisdom for this age group is not to be afraid to take on some risks because there’s plenty of time to recover, but then again, a few are beginning to think about quite the opposite: why take on risks when you have plenty of time to grow your money?
[Read the rest of this entry »]

06.01.09

Teaching kids about needs and wants

- family finance, kids and money -

“How do you teach children the difference between wants and needs?” a viewer texted ABS-CBN’s Shoptalk yesterday after host Pia Hontiveros and I spent the better part of an hour talking about financial literacy for kids.

The studio lights felt warm on my face and the ticking clock made me mumble a couple of excuses for an answer. My daughter and best critic who was watching assured me I did good, but in the harsh reality of 24-hours-after, I am now mortified at how I missed the opportunity to dissect a very important personal finance dilemma for parents.

Forget teaching most adults about wants versus needs. Most of us are hopeless. But children? The spending habits we instill in a child will make more impact on his financial life than any investment he may make in his future. I can’t even begin to explain how critical it is for a child to have a clear grasp of this concept.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

05.01.09

Don’t borrow and forget

- debt -

We have seen it before, and perhaps too often for comfort. I’m talking about temporary amnesia after borrowing from a friend or family member.

Once or twice I have been an offender (eating out with friends and the scramble for change leaves you in, say, P250 debt you plan to pay once you get to an ATM, that sort of thing), and several times, I have been a victim. It has come to a point that my friends and I make sure to give even a P5-change as soon as possible when paying for whatever, just so we wouldn’t forget. Feels good.

I am posting below an article from Mike G. Rivera (with her and the subject’s permission) to illustrate what temporary financial amnesia, so convenient for some, can do to others’ financial wellbeing. Mike is doing all he can so that others will be cured of their, uhh, temporary amnesia. So if you’re a UP Diliman student or know of someone who still owes money, give her or him a shake, will ya?
 

Paying It Back For Mang Milton
By Mike G. Rivera

Meet Meliton Zamora, a retired University of the Philippines janitor and my hero.

For forty-five years, he swept floors, cleaned up trash, watered plants and did odd jobs at the University. I met him when I was active with the UP Repertory Company, a theater group based (then) at the third floor lobby of the Arts & Sciences (AS) building. He would sweep and mop the hallway floors in silence, venturing only a nod and a smile whenever I passed him.

Back then, for me he was just one of those characters whom you got acquainted with and left behind as soon as you earned your degree and left the university for some big job in the real world. Someone whose name would probably ring a bell but whose face you’d have a hard time picturing. But for many UP students like me who were hard up and had a difficult time paying their tuition fees, Mang Mel was a hero who gave them the opportunity to finish university and get a big job in the real world.

The year was 1993 and I was on my last semester as a Clothing Technology student. My parents had been down on their luck and were struggling to pay for my tuition fee. I had been categorized as Bracket 9 in the recently implemented Socialized Tuiton and Financial Assistance Program (STFAP). My father had lost his job and to supplement my allowance, I worked part time as a Guest Relations Officer at Sam’s Diner (back when the term GRO didn’t have shady undertones) and took some odd jobs as a Production Assistant, movie extra and wardrobe mistress.

To be eligible for graduation, I had to enroll in my last three courses and pay my tuition fee. Since my parents didn’t have enough money for my matriculation, I applied for a student loan hoping that my one of my Home Economics (HE) professors would take pity on me and sign on as a guarantor for the student loan. But those whom I approached either refused or were not eligible as guarantors. After two unsuccessful weeks of looking for a guarantor, my prospects looked dim, my future dark. And so, there I was, a downtrodden twenty year old with a foggy future, crying in the AS lobby. I only had twenty four hours left to look for a guarantor.

Mang Mel, with a mop in hand, approached me and asked me why I was crying. I told him I had no guarantor for my student loan and will probably not be able to enroll this semester. I had no hopes that he would be able to help me. After all, he was just a janitor. He borrowed my loan application papers and said softly,

“Puwede ako pumirma. Empleyado ako ng UP. (I can sign. I am a UP employee.)” He borrowed my pen and signed his name. With his simple act of faith, Mang Mel not only saved my day, he also saved my future.

I paid my student loan the summer after that fateful day with Mang Milton and it has been 15 years since then. I am not filthy rich but I do have a good job in the real world that allows me to support my family and eat three meals a day. A few weeks ago, a friend and UP
Professor, Daki, told me that Mang Mel recently recorded an album which he sells to supplement his meager retirement pay, I asked another friend, Blaise, who’s taking his Master’s degree at UP to find out how we could contact Mang Mel. My gesture of gratitude for Mang Mel’s altruism has been long overdue. As fate would have it, my friend saw Mang Mel coming out of the shrubbery from behind the UP library, carrying firewood. He got Mang Mel’s address and promised him that we would come over to buy his album.

Together with Blaise and my husband Augie, I went to pay Mang Mel a visit last Sunday. Unfortunately, he was out doing a little sideline gardening for a UP professor in Tandang Sora. We were welcomed into their home by his daughter Kit. As she pointed out to a laminated photo of Mang Mel on the wall, she proudly told us that her father did retire with recognition from the University. However, she sadly related to us that many of the students whose loans Mang Mel guaranteed neglected to settle their student loans.

After forty-five years of service to the
University, Mang Mel was only attributed 171 days of work for his retirement pay because all the unpaid student loans were deducted from his full retirement pay of about 675 days. This seems to me a cruel repayment for his kindness.

This is a cybercall to anyone who did not get to pay their student loans that were guaranteed by Mang Mel. Anytime would be a good time to show Mang Mel your gratitude.

Mang Mel is not asking for a dole out, though I know he will be thankful for any assistance you can give. So I ask those of you who also benefited from Mang Meliton’s goodness or for those who simply wish to share your blessings, please do visit Mang Mel and buy his CD
(P350 only) at No. 16-A, Block 1, Pook Ricarte, U.P. Campus, Diliman, Quezon City (behind UP International House) or contact his daughter Kit V. Zamora at 0916-4058104.

Also found here.

Editor’s Note: Mang Mel has clarified that there were three unpaid loans. These and the hospitalization of his grandchild at the UP infirmary were deducted from his last bonus and retirement fund.

03.01.09

Life goals for 2009

- family finance -

This time last year, I had three New Year resolutions: pay off all consumer debt in four months, increase emergency fund to six months worth of income by December and work smarter to accomplish more in less time.

All done within the time frame I specified. Then things happened within the year that turned everything wonky again. Dang.

What I learned, however, is that some reasons for taking two steps backward and one step forward in personal finance may not always be bad. Like buying a house that the family loves and enjoys and getting into mortgage debt because of it. For some it can be getting married, having a baby, a child going to college, sacrificing income from work to give more attention to a wayward teenage son, saving a marriage by going on a cruise…
[Read the rest of this entry »]

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