Can I take out cash without a bank card or cheque book? |
| Meaning can I go in there with all the ID under the sun and my account number passport proof of adress etc, as I owe my land lord a whole load of cash and have lost both and am going away for 10 days ... |
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Online surveys? |
| Can you get paid £10 a time for completing online surveys if so can someone refer me to ... |
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Has anyone ever heard of these financial gurus? |
| Has anyone heard of these finicial gurus: Suze Orman, Dave Ramsey, Clark howard, and Ric Adelman? and are they worth listening too?... |
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What percentage of my income should be put in my 401(k)? |
| I make about $35,000 a year. I can't decide on what percent I should contribute. I don't want to go too low, but I also want a decent paycheck.... |
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What would YOU do with it? |
I have:
checking $1800
Savings $7300
I think this is a lot of money to have in savings. What would your next step be?... |
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Are £5 coins exchangeable into £5 notes? |
| I've got a five pound coin and I don't know whether it's allowed to be changed back at the post office into a £5 note. Anyone know?... |
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I received a notice from Yahoo saying I won 400,000.Is this legit & it required I pay for delivery of funds.? |
They used your headings, etc. & it looks genuine but needing us to pay for delivery raised a red flag!
Please advise ASAP!
Thanks,
Mark M... |
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I need $$$!? |
| Im 11, (almost 12 if it makes a difference) and i need CASH!!! any suggestions on how to get my hands on sum?... |
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I am 14 and i have some money questions? |
| ok so i am 14 and since i was about 12 in a half i have been saving up for when i am old like retirement. so i can retire early. every allowance i have gotten i started putting away 12% of the money ... |
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I have just ripped up £10. can i change it in the bank? |
| it was in a card and i thought it was empty so i ripped it up because it had my address on it. when i threw it i realised i had ripped it up. what can i do?... |
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Do you throw away your pennies or save them? |
| Those copper pieces in your pocket. I throw mine on the ground. I'm starting to do it with nickles.... |
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jellybean | Do you think that husbands and wives should have seperate checking accounts? |
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Dante
 |
It depends on what your perception of Marriage is. We have one account, and it's worked well. Our idea going into marriage is that everything we have is each others. We have set up some limits, however, so that we each get the same spending money to budget with.
It might also depend on your financial wellness (i.e. how loaded you are). If you've both got wads of cash, keeping tight track on each others spending habits is not as important. We have a modest budget, so it's important to honor the other partner by being willing to give over your money to the one account, and not just run off with it as you wish.
I've seen both scenarios work, but my gut feeling is for their to be one account, that everyone contributes to, and everyone enjoys equally. Lastly, I think one account builds transparency in the relationship, so there are no separate accounts that are off limits to the other person. You're in this together now, so no secrets!
Hope this helps, take care. |
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peach_campbell
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I think joint accounts are easier. Both partners can track the spending, less fees, and less bank statements cluttering up the house. But, I think you should choose which partner will be doing the banking and budgeting. That way no one worries about the other partner forgetting to pay a bill or paying a bill twice. Keep a seperate account for saving and an equally made wish list. That way you know how much is saved up and what goals you are working towards. Be honest about how much you owe each bill every month and if you are short, don't take it from one only spouse's bills and not the other. Example, if you need an extra $20 take $10 from her bills and $ 10 from his. This is the way I try to work with my husband. It seems to work for us. |
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Darren J Smalley
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That depends entirely upon their own situation and needs.
However, it appears to me that this question stems from a belief that financial health is the basis for a sound marriage. That notion alone is very unwise in that building a life long marriage based upon financial wellness can only lead to a rocky and troubled road ahead for both husband and wife and even the children of the marriage.
It has been said that poor financial health is the plague of the 21st century and the cause for a vast majority of divorces not to mention snowballing debt, bankruptcies, business failures, and destroyed retirement dreams.
I suggest you get a hold of some sound education on how best to manage your lifestyle and resources in order to achieve better financial health.
One such source of education can be found at my website below. |
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geni100
 |
If it works. There's nothing about marriage that says you can't create your own working relationship. Often, money is a VERY difficult part of being married. I AM a bit bitter tonight though, as I'm just finishing my marriage (today, actually). (Here's tonight's epitaph, in case you're interested.) |
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Timmy N
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My G/F and I have each our own seperate account at our own financial institution. We also have a "bill account" of mutuall account that we each deposit the same amount of money into. That way we both know what's going on with finances and the freedom of doing what we want to and not catching flak for it....... |
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nick j
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me and my wife have our own and a joint account. we share all our money. we mainly use our personal accounts to hide money from the other for our anniversery, birthday presents etc. but you have to trust your partner. i've been married before where when she had access to my account she would spend all the money without telling me. if you do share the account be sure and communicate with each other don't assume you know what the other is doing |
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Frank Castle
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Yeah, that's gonna work. |
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whiteknight3273
 |
Yes. |
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ptmamas
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no i think if anyone trust you enough to marry you and dedicate the rest of their lives to you should trust you with money ...but both should have full access to the books and able to keep track of what its being spent on without any arguments about who put what into the account
it should ALL be "our" money
P.S. our includes me 2...you can just send me my part though |
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The Beast
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Yes it will stop any fighting over money. |
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none
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as long as its mutually agreed upon |
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fscape444
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Of Course you should- it will help teach both of you how to handle money...you should have a seperate household checking account also and both of you should be working and adding to the household funds to pay all the bills together...and perhaps a joint savings account for special future planned trips or children or a down payment on a house etc...MARRIAGE IS 100% EFFORT FROM EACH OF YOU and you should both work towards the same goal..and spending money is your own to spend or do what you want with it... |
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ucipalo
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from the man's perspective of course!
from a womans perspective, why would they want to? |
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