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Mom - Celebrity Quotes: The Meaning of Mom. Mom - Financial Planning Missteps. Financial Planning Missteps By Sarah Lorge Butler January 24, 2013 | 11:45am EST Full Size Image Slip Up: Putting the kids first Hear us out on this one. Options abound for paying for college (finaid.org is a great first stop, whether you've got a tween or a tot), but there's no such thing as a scholarship for retirement. So you've got to set yourself up before worrying about the children (who probably don't want you moving in with them 30 years from now). Solution: Stash 15 percent of your annual income in a 401(k) or an IRA first. Slip Up: Not thinking about the unthinkable Estate planning isn't just for the 1 percent.

Solution: Get a will and a trust. Slip Up: Sweating the small stuff, skipping the big stuff Plenty of parents obsessed with pocketing pennies will write the same big checks without a second thought: mortgage, insurance, cable. Solution: Commit to giving big-budget items a second look. Follow Your Money These sites (with apps) can help you manage the family budget: ynab.com. Best of 2012: Top 10 Squawks of the Year. I’m a little giddy thinking about the year. It’s not because we survived the Mayan apocalypse, squeed over the IKEA monkey, and watched some dude named Felix Baumgartner bail from a helium balloon in the stratosphere. Sure, bigger newsier headlines could have been only if Taylor Swift had realized the common denominator in all her failed relationships is her, and if Justin Bieber’s balls had dropped. But we can’t have it all, right? Oh, speaking of balls — Prince Harry and his royal jewels did not disappoint, and we’ll always have binders full of women to remind us of political nuts.

But reminiscing over the year’s headlines doesn’t bring on my giddy. This year was my favorite year yet. So I’ve rounded up the top posts you liked best. 1. I just wanted you to grab your GROGGY and run, but this post ran away from me and became your guide to shopping like a Scandinavian. How to survive a trip to IKEA is your top Squawk of the year. How to survive a trip to IKEA 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.

Rental income IR264. Documents numbered between 200 and 299 Rental income IR264 (published April 2014) About this guide This guide explains the tax rules for people who own rental property and it is intended for people who own one or two rental properties, or who have boarders or flatmates rather than larger property investors. Adobe Acrobat PDF | 206kb | 44 pages When to use this guide If you have one or two rental properties or boarders and flatmate, learn here about: the income you must include in your tax return the expenses you can deduct from this income for tax purposes the records you'll need to keep what to do if the property is owned by more than one person what happens if the property is sold.

What you will need Download Acrobat Reader to view PDF files Report an accessibility problem for this page. Financial Planning - Family Finance. Inland Revenue - Te Tari Taake. The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss. “Everyone’s looking for rules to follow, and the sooner you realize there aren’t any, the better art can be.”– Jerrod Carmichael Jerrod Carmichael is pushing the boundaries of comedy with his groundbreaking work in stand-up, television, and film. Now just 29 years old, what this driven North Carolina native has accomplished is mind-boggling, and 2017 is going to be his biggest year yet. Jerrod stars in the hit NBC series The Carmichael Show, which he also writes and executive produces. The third season of the show premieres in 2017.

In March of 2017, Jerrod will star in his second stand-up comedy special on HBO, directed by Bo Burnham. Love at the Store is the funniest standup special I’ve seen in many years, and it’s the reason I reached out to Jerrod. In the summer of 2016, Jerrod reprised his role as ‘Garf’ in the Universal comedy sequel Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising opposite Seth Rogen and Zac Efron. Please enjoy my wide-ranging conversation with Jerrod Carmichael! BNZ - Helping you be good with money.