顯示具有 Fears 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 Fears 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2012年5月31日 星期四

A Nobel Economist Fears for the Poorest Greeks

Christopher Pissarides won a Nobel Prize in economics in 2010, but he hasn’t forgotten his roots in a modest, Greek-speaking village on the island nation of Cyprus. He was born in 1948. Although his father had a successful business selling materials for making clothes and other items for the home, Pissarides lived among people who scratched out a meager living as farmers. “Work on the fields would begin at dawn with mules and donkeys and end at sunset,” he recalled in his Nobel autobiography.

That sensitivity to the lives of the poor shines through in an interview that Pissarides gave today to Jennifer Ryan of Bloomberg News. He is talking about capital flight—the movement of euros out of Greece into bank accounts abroad. Capital flight increases the chance that Greece will be forced to abandon the euro. People who move their euros abroad are betting that if Greece does return to the drachma, they will be able to buy big piles of them with their euro stash.

“It’s the wealthy who will benefit because that’s who’s able to move their money abroad,” Pissarides tells Ryan. “Wealthy Greeks have already done it, whereas the small saver is not going to do it.”

Even the middle class is at a disadvantage to the rich, says Pissarides, who is a professor at the London School of Economics.

“Foreign banks do not always accept small deposits from non-residents even though they’re part of the euro system,” he says. “If you’re a small shop owner in Athens or one of the smaller towns, how do you find a foreign bank to open a foreign account, do you take your cash in hand and fly off to Italy or Switzerland or wherever? It’s not that easy.”

Read Pissarides’s Nobel autobiography and you sense where his concern for the poor comes from. Here’s an excerpt:

We were a happy family and I had a good upbringing. I have particularly fond memories of our family evenings at home before television, and our summers on the coast of Kyrenia and the mountains and valleys of Agros. I used to spend the time with my cousins, fishing in Kyrenia (mostly unsuccessfully) or playing in the riverbeds and springs of Agros. Cultivation in the village was still at subsistence level, in small plots, and occasionally we would stray into some vegetable patch or tomato bed, to be chased away by hard-working men and women in their traditional village clothes. Work on the fields would begin at dawn with mules and donkeys and end at sunset. On Sunday everything changed, as the whole village gathered at the church to pray, gossip and hold memorial services for their dead, distributing to everyone the traditional home made “kolliva” (boiled wheat with dried fruit, almonds and pomegranate seeds). Service in the Greek Orthodox Church was in the original Byzantine Greek of the bible, so I doubt whether anyone in the village, except perhaps the priest and the teacher, understood much. But it was certainly a great social occasion that I enjoyed very much. Watching how my relations who stayed behind in the village worked and how generous they were with their crops when we visited taught me a lot about family and inner well-being.


View the original article here

2011年5月21日 星期六

3 Sure Ways to Trump Your Investing Fears


Often times when people here the word "invest" they become

frightened. It is probably one of the most misunderstood

words on the planet. As a result, many employees as well

as other individuals refuse to invest their money in anything

other than a passbook savings or money market account. That

includes those who have retirement accounts available through

their employer.

So, what is stopping you from starting to invest? The following are three of the most common reasons are I found after taking a poll:

1. I don't have enough money to invest.

2. I have to pay off my bills first.

3. I have money to invest, but I am afraid.

What can you do to alleviate your fear of investing? There

are many inexpensive ways to start investing. You can open

an investment account with a broker that sells shares or

partial shares of stocks, this type of broker is usually

found online. You can open a mutual fund account with a

mutual fund company, that will allow you to start with a

small amount of money. You can start investing with your

company employee retirement plan. And finally, you will

have to shed some old baggage about investing, for example,

"I will start investing when I get my bills paid off," or "I am

afraid to invest." The main questions being, how do you shed

this baggage and allay all fears?

1. The first most common reason the poll respondents don't start investing is because they think it is too expensive. They feel a lot of money is needed to start investing in stocks or mutual funds.

There are mutual fund companies that will allow you to start

an investment account for as little as one hundred dollars,

and add as little as twenty-five dollars a month. You can

do a search for mutual funds in any internet search engine

or research them in your local library. There are many companies

that will allow you to invest in a few shares or partial shares

of stock, starting with as little as eight dollars a month, and

adding eight dollars a month to your account to purchase additional shares or partial shares. Using your company retirement account is another way to invest with ease. In most cases, you will have the option to pick among investments already chosen by your company. The money is taken out of your check, so you don't miss the funds and you receive tax advantages.

2. The second most common reason the respondents gave is that they are told to pay off bills before they start to invest.

It is a good idea to have your debt well under control

before you start to invest. The interest rates on

outstanding debts are sometimes in excess of the interest

rates on investments, coupled with compounded interest, debt

payments can be excessive. There is an easy way to invest

after you have your bills under control, that is to treat

your investment savings as "just another bill," before you

know it, you will have a significant amount of money in your

savings account, you can invest.

3. Fear was the third most common reason the respondents don't

invest. This fear can be easily conquered with education and

detailed information about investing.

Do you have plenty of money to invest, but you are simply

afraid? I think the term for that is, "fear of the unknown".

That is probably the easiest investment stop addressed in

this article. The Internet has brought learning to our

fingertips, there are thousands of websites that teach

investing from a consumers perspective. Brokerage sites and

web portals provide research with detailed information about

stocks, mutual funds and other investments to protect your

interest and your money. If you are not Internet savvy, take

a trip to your local library, the librarian will show you how to use investment research catalogs such as Value Line reports for stocks research, and Morningstar Mutual Fund Reports for

Mutual Funds research. Doing your own research will teach

you how to choose low risk, low cost investments. Investment

research will also teach you how to analyze the investments

that your advisor chooses for you.








Lois Center-Shabazz, who is the author of the award winning book, "Let's Get Financial Savvy! From Debt-Free To Investing With Ease" ISBN #0971979502, and the founder of the critically acclaimed investment teaching website, http://www.MsFinancialSavvy.com