Friday, April 8, 2011

Financial Planning Workshop In Universiti Malaysia Terengganu



I have the honour to travel to my home state, Terengganu to conduct a Financial Planning Workshop for the undergraduates of the Universiti Malaysia Terengganu in Kuala Terengganu. The participants of about 60 were energetic, participative and very eager to learn. I was there for 2 days from 1st to 2nd April, 2011. It was a great lecturing experience for me and I didn't miss the chance to savour the best nasi dagang in Terengganu.

Here's a video shot of the energetic participants that I had in the class..





Friday, December 11, 2009

Early Warning Signs Of Debt Problem




A diminishing bank account balance as a result of overspending is the first sign of a debt problem. Another sign of problem is the lack of ability to pay your debt. Cash has become tight and you feel like you never have enough money. This scenario creates a negative domino affect on your entire financial well-being.

1.Credit Cards
A sign of debt trouble is when you start taking cash advances from your credit cards to pay minimum balance or basic living costs. This is financial suicide. Another sign is when you start accepting credit card offers that are sent to you in the mail. You use these credit card to pay the bills for your existing credit card debts. One of the ways to begin eliminating your debt is by changing the way you budget.

2. Balance Transfers
You can really put yourself in debt if you continue to transfer your balances from the credit cards with the high balance or the high interest rate to a different card. Also, do not abuse the convenient checks credit card companies send you. The bills will grow. Previously you were able to pay the minimum, now the minimum is more than you can afford.

3. Balances
A warning sign of debt trouble is when you no longer know how much you owe to your various creditors. If this is the case there a variety of different methods for dealing with creditors. If you neglect to make payments to your creditors and become a few months delinquent, then your account is going to go into trouble.

In conclusion...
Not all debt is bad, however. The trick is to be able to understand how to manage your finances so that you can reap the benefits of debt and avoid financial woes at the same time.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Please Sign In - Tan CK's Blog

I would like to invite you to sign in so that I can put you in my mailing list for the latest articles and information related to financial planning and money management.

For your effort in signing in, I would like to present you with a F.REE gift in the form of an e-Book titled "Think and Grow Rich" by Napoleon Hill.




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Universiti Pahang Malaysia - Video Shot and Group Photo

Here's the video shot and group photo of the enthusiastic participants of the Financial Planning Workshop held on the 18 & 19 July, 2009.



Saturday, July 18, 2009

Financial Planning Workshop in Universiti Malaysia Pahang 18 & 19 July 2009




The Financial Planning Workshop organized by Malaysian Financial Planning Council (MFPC) was held in Universiti Malaysia Pahang on 18th and 19th July, 2009. About 100 undergraduates attended the session conducted by myself, Mr Michael Kok and En. Rafie Omar.

It was an interesting experience to get to share my experience and the knowledge of financial planning with these future workforce of our nation. I conducted both the morning sessions of the 2-day event.

Public & Business Financial Expo & Seminar




On 30th and 31st of May 2009, I was invited by Money Compass the organizer of the Public & Business Financial Expo & Seminar held at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (KLCC) to speak on Personal Debt Management. The turn out of the event was very good, especially during my session where the seminar hall was totally filled.

The event was officiated by the Deputy Minister of Finance, Dato' Wira Chor Chee Heung. The letter of appreciation of my contribution to the event was personally handed to me on stage by the Deputy Minister. I took the opportunity to also taken a few photographs with him and also the Organizing Chairperson Miss Amy Seok, and the President of the Malaysian Financial Planning Council (MFPC).

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Steps to Financial Security (Part 2)


4) Trim Expenses

We live in an "Era of Consumerisma". That is, we order our lives on the belief in and need for a constant upgrading of personal demands. We take this increase in our standard of living for granted. We spend our money on that assumption.

It may seem strange, then, to say that we should take a hard look at what we buy or use — and cut down expenses. Yet that is exactly what we should be doing if we want to increase the value of our money.

A few examples. Do you need that magazine subscription? Do you need the services of a gardener? Is it really necessary to have a new car? Why not purchase a good used one? New-car payments, plus the required total insurance coverage, have been the ruination of many personal budgets.

One important reason our money doesn't buy what it should is that we are using far more services than ever before. Most services depend heavily on labor costs. If we carefully budget our money, we can identify those services that lead to excess expenses. Then we can take appropriate action to change our spending habits.

One example of an area where you may be able to cut costs is by eating out less often. You might be astonished at what some people spend over a year's time eating in restaurants. Figure out the cost of a single meal at a restaurant. Then estimate how many times you do this weekly, and multiply the amount spent by 52. You will find the yearly sum spent on eating out can be astonishingly high.

5) Invest for the Future

In terms of financial goals, we must first plan for today. But we must also carefully consider the future. If we include a regular savings plan in our budget, we can build up a sizable nest egg over the years.

It's important to think through your goals in life as early as possible. However, it's never too late to do so. Consider your long-term financial goals. Make these a part of your spending and saving plan. What about a possible home purchase, the cost of educating children, and money for retirement?

Perhaps our income is not that large. Can we save at least a small portion each year? If we do this over a 30-year period, placing the money in a wise investment, we'd be surprised at how much we would have for the later years of our lives. From this nest egg, we could draw an income, upon retirement, from the interest we receive on our investment.

Steps to Financial Security (Part 1)


If you're like most people, having enough money for a decent and secure life is one of your major concerns. Those on fixed incomes may be especially worried about creeping inflation, the rising costs of goods and services. The threat of unemployment or job loss (or business failure) also causes the jitters.

What will you do about improving your financial situation? Or you're deeply in debt. How will you make your payments and become debt-free?

Reasonable prosperity is something all of us would like to achieve and hold on to.

Let's look at the below financial principles that can help a person become more financially secure.

1) Budget Money Wisely

A most important point to remember: Make the most from the money you already earn. To spend one's money more effectively is the same as increasing one's salary. How's your "money management quotient"? One well-known family financial counselor wrote, "Managing your money may well be the single most important thing you can do today."

We may learn to be money earners, but can still end up as paupers. We have to become wise money spenders as well. Studies show that even those individuals who earn large salaries still feel financially strapped. It seems that many people's outgo for needs and wants exceeds their income.

Sound money management teaches us a basic financial maxim: There is never enough money for everything we might want or need. So we need a sensible spending plan.

A spending plan is like a road map. A budget helps us arrive at our financial destination, safe and sound. Every business and government must have a spending plan and must strive to follow it. Such a plan guides the effective use of money in many ways. It helps us:

Live within our means. A plan gives us greater control over our financial resources. We can immediately know whether something we desire to purchase is affordable.

Realize personal goals. With a spending budget, we can plan purchases properly, service debt payments, accumulate savings, save for the future.

Spend money effectively. Merchandisers know that shoppers make spur-of-the-moment purchases. Items on the supermarket counters are often positioned in such a way as to encourage purchases. A spending plan helps us to circumvent impulse buying. We buy only what we planned to buy and only those things our plan tells us we can afford.

A spending plan helps us to ask the right questions about our money. Is this the time to buy this product? Is this the most economical way to buy it? Would we rather have this product than something else? Do we have the money to buy it? Does it fit in with our goals in life?

A spending plan helps us to balance the desire for present enjoyment with long- and short-term financial needs. Instead of buying now and paying later, we begin to think of saving first and then buying when we can afford it.

If you don't know where the money goes, you can't get it to go where it should. A budget or spending plan should include three important areas:

Emergencies. We should put money away each month for unforeseen circumstances such as car and house repairs.

High-cost items. Don't buy that new television today. Each month put money into a savings account. Buy the television for cash — on your terms, without interest and at the most financially appropriate time, such as during a timely sale. Don't buy that new television today. Each month put money into a savings account. Buy the television for cash — on your terms, without interest and at the most financially appropriate time, such as during a timely sale.

Annual or periodic bills. Put away money each week, month or pay period for a future bill such as insurance or taxes. For example, if you pay an insurance bill once each year, put away one twelfth of the total in your savings each month.

2) Increase Income

Another step toward financial security has to do with maximizing our income. We need to have enough money and resources to make life what it should be without jeopardizing our mental, social and spiritual needs.

Most people are paid an hourly wage or work on salary for someone else. If you're in this situation, your chances for suddenly increasing your income by a large amount may not be particularly promising. You may receive automatic but small raises based on a company formula or union-management agreement. In some cases, your company may grant built-in cost-of-living increases.

If there is a possibility of "moving up" financially, you will have to demonstrate your usefulness. Make yourself more valuable to your boss or company. Put the emphasis on helping your organization earn more money, save money or improve its product or performance. Earn a raise.

What if you cannot do better financially even though you work harder and smarter? You have two options. Stay put or move to another job or company. Do not consider quitting your present job, however, until you know a better and more secure position awaits you.

Perhaps your type of employment has only limited monetary value. And you've achieved the highest pay possible. Can you educate yourself and improve your value in the job marketplace?

Perhaps you have the ability to create your own job by starting a small business. To succeed, you will have to make your product or service valuable and desirable to the consumer. Beware, however, of the immense amount of paperwork involved in being self-employed.

Simply put, being able to earn more depends on your attitude of service to others. It also means making the most of your abilities and situation.

3) Use Loans Wisely

The proper use of loans has significantly facilitated the flow of goods and services. Long-term, low-interest loans have made it possible to purchase items such as homes or automobiles that otherwise would have required the accumulation of many years' savings.

Another credit mechanism, the credit card, has been a tremendous boon to the consumer who is temporarily low on cash. It has eliminated the danger of carrying large amounts of cash, especially during long periods of travel. And credit cards may even be required for some purchases. But buying on credit can be a financial curse as well as a convenience, particularly when a person falls behind in making payments.

Credit buying often creates the illusion of prosperity. The small size of the monthly installment, its delayed arrival at the end of the month and the lack of cash at the time of the purchase make luxuries seem suddenly within reach. These features persuade millions of families, with otherwise adequate incomes, to spend their paychecks before they even receive them.

Once you get trapped in installment payments, the money you could have in your savings account goes to a credit institution. In effect, you are paying a premium in order to own something now instead of later.

If you habitually use credit in this manner, it can often turn out to be an expensive proposition. It sometimes adds up to a staggering 18 percent a year.

Shopping with cash, on the other hand, can often save the consumer more than just monthly interest charges. The person who pays cash can sometimes buy at a discount. Cash-conscious consumers can also take advantage of seasonal sales. They are able to shop around more freely and buy where their money has the most purchasing power. Individuals operating on credit are sometimes forced to purchase where they have their charge accounts, even though a sale may be going on next door.

The average money manager first should realize that there are two types of family and personal expenses: needs and wants. It is important to know the difference. In today's society, credit buying for items such as a car or a home can be looked on as a necessity. Even these purchases, however, can sometimes be delayed until more cash is available to lessen the finance charges.

On the other hand, credit should rarely be used for wants. Families in trouble have often used too much credit on wants rather than on what they really needed. Until they can accumulate savings, they should adopt a policy of buying wants, such as television sets, sporting goods or excess furniture, strictly on a cash basis. Here's why: Saving cash for luxuries or desires puts a remarkably stabilizing influence on a family's monetary policy. By the time you have saved the cash, there will be little doubt in your mind whether you can afford the item or if, in fact, you really want it.

To use this approach, you must resolve not to purchase anything on credit until your accounts are all paid in full. At least limit the credit purchases during your transition period to an absolute minimum so you can get your credit accounts paid off as early as possible. Then, instead of immediately obligating yourself to more payments by purchasing additional items, let your savings accumulate until you can begin to buy these items for cash.

Remember: The wise family can learn to live with credit, but it should never live by it!

4 Simple Steps For Setting Financial Goals


As with anything else in life, without financial goals and specific plans for meeting them, we drift along and leave our future to chance. A wise man once said: "Most people don't plan to fail; they just fail to plan." The end result is the same: failure to reach financial independence.

Step 1: Identify and write down your financial goals, whether they are saving to send your kids to college, buying a new car, saving for a down payment on a house, going on vacation, paying off credit card debt, or planning for retirement.

Step 2: Break each financial goal down into several short-term (less than 1 year), medium-term (1 to 3 years) and long-term (5 years or more) goals.

Step 3: Educate yourself! Read Money magazine, or a book about investing, or surf the Internet's investing web sites. The stock market is not voodoo. With a little effort you can learn enough to make educated decisions that will increase your net worth many times over. Then identify small, measurable steps you can take to achieve these goals, and put this action plan to work.

Step 4: Evaluate your progress. Review your progress monthly, quarterly, or at any other interval you feel comfortable with, but at least semi-annually, to determine if your program is working. If you're not making satisfactory progress on a particular goal, re-evaluate your approach and make changes as necessary.

DO IT NOW!

There are no hard and fast rules for implementing a financial plan. The important thing is to do SOMETHING, and to start NOW.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Please Sign In To Continue Receiving My Blog Posting And Your FREE E-Book

I would like to invite you to sign in so that I can put you in my mailing list for the latest articles and information related to financial planning and money management.

For you effort in signing in, I would like to present you with a F.REE gift in the form of an e-Book titled "Think and Grow Rich" by Napoleon Hill.




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It is really a great pleasure to be able to meet up with you and I hope to meet up with you again real soon.


Financial Planning Workshop in Universiti Darul Iman Malaysia, Kuala Terengganu




This was an event that I have been looking forward to. I was invited to lecture in my home state, Terengganu by the Malaysian Financial Planning Council (MFPC) for the undergraduates of Universiti Darul Iman, Malaysia, in Kuala Terenganu on the 20th and 21st March, 2009.

The Financial Planning workshop was attended by more than 150 undergraduates. It was an amazing feeling to lecture in Bahasa Malaysia and the occasional use of some loghat Terengganu made me feel so at home.

Apart from the regular module on Financial Planning, I have included in my session, some very important aspects of personal money management which will be helpful for these final year undergraduates when the get in to their career world.

Click on the below arrow for a video shot of the UDM particpants of the workshop:




Save And Invest Seminar and Advisory Roadshow



I was invited as a guest speaker for the Save and Invest Seminar and Advisory Roadshow organized by the Money Compass, a Chinese personal money magazine on the 1st of March 2009 at Vistana Hotel, Kuantan.

The title of my talk was "From Debt to Wealth". During the 1-hour session, I shared with the participants on how to manage their personal debts and revealed powerful strategies to be debt-free in the shortest time possible. I have also received lots of feedback from participants through the telephone and emails after the session.


Financial Planning Workshop in Uniten

Malaysian Financial Planning Council (MFPC) with the cooperation of Permodalan Nasional Berhad and Universiti Tenaga Nasional (Uniten) organized a 2-day Financial Planning Workshop for Uniten undergraduates on the 7th and 8th February, 2009.

I was invited to lecture in this special workshop that was held in conjunction with the Signing Ceremony between MFPC and Uniten. Also present in the grand event were the President and Group CEO of Permodalan Nasional Berhad, Tan Sri Dato' (Dr) Hamad Kama Piah, Mr Alex Foong of MFPC and VIP's of Uniten.




Below are some photos of the event and a video shot of the workshop particpants:





Myths of Creating Wealth (Part 2)




Myth No. 5: It used to be easier
Statistics show an increase in the number of millionaires in the world every year. Talking about the "good old times" only offers comfort and a convenient excuse. If you look around, you'll see there are people who behaved the same way in the "good old times" as they do now, yet their success has been recent. With technology and progress come new ideas, desires and needs and there are more business opportunities appearing daily to serve them.

Myth No. 6: I'm too young
If you research the life stories of some of the most successful people, you'll see that this isn't true at all. Some became wealthy early in their lives (perhaps from the stock market), while others found their fortune in their old age. Ray Kroc, was more than fifty years old when he bought and made the first McDonald's.

Myth No. 7: I don't have enough money to start. You have to spend money to make money.This is no different from any other excuse or "myth." Like the others, it's obvious this one isn't true either. Many have made their fortunes starting from scratch, living in an apartment or working out of their garage and yet, they developed business empires that are worth billions of dollars today. The other elements of success are far more important than having seed money to start a business.
But yes, often money helps and it certainly doesn't hurt. Like everything else discussed in other myths: it probably helps, but it is not always necessary.

Myth No. 8: I'll begin when I know everything.
Do you believe that you will know everything someday? Or even that you'll know enough to ever be "really prepared now?" The more you learn, the more you see what you still need to learn. Success and obtaining wealth is a dynamic process. Even if you "could" come out of the gate knowing everything there is to know, some of those elements will change immediately and many will change rapidly. If you don't decide now, nothing will happen. Live and learn.

Some millionaires have even allowed themselves to go bankrupt and then (even faster) recreated their wealth, sometimes even greater than before. Money itself isn't the obstacle that is keeping you from being wealthy. If you're really good in your business, don't worry, because someone that will offer you money (a bank or business partner) will appear who will appreciate your talent knowing you are a very good investment opportunity. But you can't sit around waiting for this - make it happen.

Exercise "taking action" as much as you can. Make your workplace better or more efficient. After all, even if someone else signs your paycheck, you really work for you. Even if you are an employee in a large corporation - it isn't your corporation - but it is the only corporation through which you can prove what you are capable of right now.

All of us have what it takes to become a millionaire! Born winners, yet few of us know how to take advantage of and cultivate the possibilities hidden inside our own mind!

No one can ever grant you greater potential than your heart already holds…you need only discover its contents to find the one true path to your success in life. Born with the seeds to our success, the greatest decisions must always come from the inside! You will discover a new, deep well of fortune – yourself!

Myths of Creating Wealth (Part 1)

You have probably read or heard about various myths (these are the truths that are valid only for certain cases, but not in general) surrounding wealth and wealthy people, all of which hinder your quest for financial independence.


Here are the most common and most destructive:

Myth No. 1: How much you earn depends on how hard you work
If this were true, then the physical, blue-collar workers, who have been working hard for years, would have been the wealthiest people on earth. Of course, this isn't true. They form most of the workforce and the vast majority of the middle-class.
If you witnessed your parents coming home tired from a long day's work in your youth, you probably learned that money wasn't a sufficient reward for all that effort. People who work "just" for the money often have debts because they comfort themselves with whatever they can buy, beautiful things they lack when working.

Myth No. 2: Being paid for something you enjoy isn't work and you shouldn't ask for money for doing something that is enjoyable.
Check this with millionaires. They all have so much money that they don't need to work anymore. Nevertheless, they work for other reasons, challenge, satisfaction, fullness of life, activity, fun ... and all are connected to a love for their work. If there was no joy in doing a certain task, they would do something else that would make them much happier and that enables them to realize their dreams.
In fact, if you don't enjoy your work, you will never become wealthy doing it! However, just because you enjoy your work doesn't mean you shouldn't get paid for it - in fact, that is the ultimate goal, to get paid for what you already enjoy so it never feels like you are at work!

Myth No. 3: You need to be in the right line of business to amass wealth
Do you think so? This must mean that all the people who are involved in the same business are millionaires. Of course, this isn't true. In each business there are winners and losers; winners abound, even in businesses that consist of distasteful (to most) or "impossible" work like sweeping the streets, collecting the trash, working in a factory, pumping gas, selling newspapers, etc. On the other hand, there are just as many "losers" in businesses like selling real estate, management or being a stockbroker.

Myth No. 4: You need the right education to make a fortune
Are the most educated people really the wealthiest? Not at all! In this case, university professors would be the wealthiest people on earth. Ask them about their salaries, if you get the opportunity. The truth is vastly different - the wealthiest people are those who can convert their knowledge (or education) into money, in the best possible way. They can be highly educated people (like inventors, scientists, etc.) or almost ignorant.
Being formally uneducated does not equate to poor performance on the job or the inability to form a strong enough vision to carry a person to success - they can easily be experts without having a formal education.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Financial Concept Undergraduates Must Know(Part 4)

The miracle of compound interest



This is a concept best illustrated by example. Let's say I give you 1 cent today, and promise to double the amount every day for a full month. How much money would I be giving you on the 31st day?





The answer: $10.7 million. Check it out:

It all adds up Day 1 $0.01

Day 2 $0.02

Day 3 $0.04

Day 4 $0.08

Day 5 $0.16

Day 6 $0.32

Day 7 $0.64

Day 8 $1.28

Day 9 $2.56

Day 10 $5.12

Day 11 $10.24

Day 12 $20.48

Day 13 $40.96

Day 14 $81.92

Day 15 $163.84

Day 16 $327.68

Day 17 $655.36

Day 18 $1,310.72

Day 19 $2,621.44

Day 20 $5,242.88

Day 21 $10,485.76

Day 22 $20,971.52

Day 23 $41,943.04

Day 24 $83,886.08

Day 25 $167,772.16

Day 26 $335,544.32

Day 27 $671,088.64

Day 28 $1,342,177.28

Day 29 $2,684,354.56

Day 30 $5,368,709.12

Day 31 $10,737,418.24


Each day, the "interest" I paid you the previous day earns more interest. At the beginning, the amounts are nominal, but by the end we're talking big bucks.

Of course, no one's going to double your money every day. But this concept explains how people who save relatively small amounts over the years can build rather substantial nest eggs. After a few decades, their actual contributions represent only a small part of their burgeoning wealth -- it's mostly their returns that are earning returns.

But this also illustrates how debts can quickly balloon out of control. If you're paying interest, rather than incurring it, and you're not diligent about paying off the finance charges in full every month, the unpaid amount will incur additional interest charges, increasing the total amount that you owe. This is why so many families who incur credit card debt eventually find themselves in trouble as the amounts they owe explode past their ability to pay.



Financial Concept Undergraduates Must Know(Part 3)

Why supply and demand rule

For the most part, prices are set by the interaction between supply and demand. If demand for something suddenly shoots up and the available supply of that something doesn't change, then prices will increase. If demand drops or supply increases, prices typically fall.

Here's an example. Say football star Ronaldo is photographed wearing a cap with the brand name of Merah Jambu. Suddenly, all his fans and half the people reading Football magazine decide they, too, need the Merah Jambu hat. The farm supply companies that stock these hats figure out a good thing when they see it, and double, then triple, the price. The hat actually worn by Ronaldo sells for a mint on eBay, earning a notice in mainstream newspapers and furthering the craze.

The Merah Jambu company wants a piece of this action and starts cranking out hats by the ton. Suddenly you can find one in every Carrefour and Wal-Mart. The retailers can no longer command a premium for having a rare item, thanks to the increase in supply. In fact, the hats start seeming a heck of a lot less cool, lowering demand; Carrefour and Wal-Mart slash the price still further to get rid of their unwanted supply.

Supply and demand have a lot to do with our incomes as well. If we have rare skills that are in high demand by employers, we can negotiate higher pay. If, on the other hand, a lot of people can do what we do or the employer need for what we do is limited, our incomes are likely to be stunted.

The time value of money



This boils down to a relatively simple proposition: that the dollar I get today is worth more than a dollar I'm promised sometime in the future.

There are several reasons for this. One is the "bird in the hand" reality: the dollar I get today is real, but the dollar I'm promised in the future likely will be worth less (because of inflation), or I might not get it at all (you might renege on your promise to give it to me, or die, or cease operations if you're an employer or business). Also, the dollar I get today can be invested to create more dollars in the future.

Turn this around, and you'll see why lenders charge interest for loaning money -- and why the interest rate depends on your creditworthiness. Lenders want to be compensated for the erosion in their dollars due to inflation, and for the risk of lending money to you.

The higher the perceived rate of future inflation and the more lenders doubt your promise to pay the money back, the more interest they'll charge to compensate for the risk.




Financial Concept Undergraduates Must Know(Part 2)


Scarcity makes your choices for you

It's lovely to believe in a world of endless abundance, but the reality is that at any given point in time, our resources have limits. Whether it's oil in the ground, our time here on Earth or the cash in our pockets, there's only so much available to be spent.

People who ignore this reality are the ones who run out of Ringgit before they run out of month, or who extend their unsustainable spending by relying on credit cards, home equity loans and other reckless borrowing. Their refusal to make the sometimes-hard choices needed to responsibly manage money means that they will have even fewer choices in the future. The money they spend on stuff and on interest can't be invested in other goals, like retirement, so odds are pretty good they'll wind up old and broke.

The pointlessness of the hedonic treadmill

This isn't the latest workout device at your gym. The hedonic treadmill means that we quickly adjust to improved circumstances. A raise at work or a new possession may make us happy for a little while, but we soon take our situation for granted. Our expectations continue to rise: if only I could get another raise, or a better car, or a bigger house. Should those expectations be satisfied, again we'd adjust and quickly want more.

This has a lot of implications for personal finance and the economy, but here's something to consider: Maybe we need to look beyond our wallets for true happiness.

Every money decision has a cost of its own

"Opportunity cost," very simply, means what we give up to get something else. In every choice, there's an opportunity cost. If you decide to go to college, for example, you're giving up the income you could have earned by working full-time during those years plus whatever you could have purchased with the money used to attend school. You also may take on loans to pay for school, which will have to be paid back with future income that could have gone for other purposes.

The good news, of course, is that even with opportunity costs, college is a slam-dunk for most people. The average graduate makes 70% more over his or her lifetime than someone who stops with a high school diploma.

Financial Concept Undergraduates Must Know(Part 1)


Here are the economic and financial concepts I wish everybody knew:

The difference between needs and wants
Our actual needs are pretty limited: food, shelter, clothing, companionship. Just about everything else is a "want," and our wants are essentially endless. Because our resources are limited, we have to make choices about which wants to fulfill.


Also, the way we fulfill our needs involves a lot of choice. Shelter, for example, can be a bed at a mission for the homeless or a $125 million mansion. Our food choices offer a similar range, from beans and tap water consumed at home to steak and Dom Perignon at an exclusive restaurant.

I've discovered many people believe they have to spend money in certain ways or in certain amounts, when in reality their spending is a choice -- or is at least based on choices they made earlier. If you're facing a monster housing loan payment, for example, it's because you chose to buy that home and selected that particular housing loan.

Taking responsibility for our choices can be scary, but it should also be empowering. After all, if you have choices, you're not just a victim of circumstance.

Selamat Datang Ke Blog Tabung Duit Siswa


Terima kasih kerana melayari blog Tabung Duit Siswa.

Sebagai seorang trainer Financial Planning Workshop anjuran Malaysian Financial Planning Council (MFPC)saya berasa cukup bertuah kerana dapat berkongsi pengetahuan serta pengalaman dalam aspek pengurusan serta perancangan kewangan kepada mahasiswa-mahasiswa serta mahasiswi-mahasiswi Universiti-universiti serta Insitusi-institusi Pengajian Tinggi di Malaysia.

Saya juga amat kagum dengan sokongan serta sikap ingin belajar sertiap mahasiswa serta mahasiswi semasa menghadiri program Financial Planning Workshop tersebut.

Sebagai lanjutan kepada program tersebut, saya ujudkan blog ini untuk menyampaikan maklumat serta pengetahuan tambahan untuk semua peserta.

Adalah diharap maklumat yang diisikan dalam blog ini dapat membantu semua dalam mempertingkatkan lagi pengetahuan serta amalan pengurusan wang serta perancangan kewangan yang baik.

Semoga sihat-sihat serta kaya-kaya selalu....

Tan Choon Kiang