PF1 - Personal Finance 1 Overview
Personal Finance 1
Introduction
In this unit you will learn about personal financial decision-making. As wage earners and consumers, you will be faced with major personal economic decisions including how to use economics to analyze major life decisions such as buying a house or car, budget your income, select financial institutions for saving and investment, and make consumer decisions based on interest rates.
Lesson Objectives
In this module, students should be able to:
- Analyze major life decisions using economics-based decision-making skills.
- Analyze income as a scarce resource that can be allocated effectively through budgeting.
- Explain how the financial system channels funds from savers to investors.
- Explain how interest rates affect various consumer decisions.
Key Terms
The following key terms will help you understand the content in this module.
- Bond – debt obligations of corporations or governments
- Budget – a spending and saving plan based on your expected income and expenses
- Cryptocurrency – a digital currency in which transactions are verified and records maintained by a decentralized system using cryptography, rather than by a centralized authority
- Compound interest – interest computed on the original principal plus accumulated interest
- Deductions – amounts subtracted from your gross pay
- Diversification – the spreading of risk among many types of investments
- Dividends – money paid to stockholders from the corporation’s earnings
- Fixed interest – interest rate that does not change
- Grants – forms of educational funding that do not have to be repaid
- Gross pay – the total amount you earn before any deductions are subtracted
- Interest – money paid for the use of money; earnings on a savings account
- Investing – the use of savings to earn a financial return
- Mortgage – a loan to purchase real estate
- Mutual fund – a large, professionally managed group of investments
- Net pay – the amount left after all deductions are taken out of your gross pay
- Net worth – the difference between assets and liabilities
- Overdraft – A check written for more money than your account contains
- Salary – the amount of monthly or annual pay you will earn for your labor
- Scholarships – cash allowances awarded to students to pay education costs
- Simple interest – interest computed only on the amount borrowed, without compounding
- Stock – a unit of ownership in a corporation
- Variable interest – interest rate that goes up and down with inflation and other economic indicators
- Work-study – a program where students work on campus to earn money
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