PF2 - Personal Finance 2 Overview
Personal Finance 2
Introduction
In this unit you will learn more about personal financial decision-making. As wage earners and consumers, you will be faced with major personal economic decisions including how to use credit, purchase insurance, plan a career, and protect yourself as a consumer.
Lesson Objectives
In this module, students should be able to:
- Evaluate the costs and benefits of using credit.
- Analyze how insurance and other risk-management strategies protect against financial loss.
- Describe how the earnings of workers are determined in the marketplace.
- Explain ways consumers are protected by rules and regulations.
- Explain sources of and protection against identity theft.
Key Terms
The following key terms will help you understand the content in this module.
- Asset protection – protects assets like your home and car if you need extra insurance coverage to keep from losing them
- Bankruptcy – a legal process that relieves debtors of the responsibility of paying their debts or protects them while they try to repay
- Collateral – property pledged to a creditor to assure repayment of a loan
- Credit – the use of someone else’s money, borrowed now with the agreement to pay it back later
- Credit bureau – a business that gathers, stores, and sells credit information to other businesses
- Credit history – the complete record of your borrowing and repayment performance
- Credit rating – a measure of creditworthiness based on an analysis of your credit and financial history
- Credit report – a written statement of a consumer’s credit history, issued by a credit bureau to businesses
- Credit score – the total of assigned points used to determine the likelihood that you will repay debt as agreed
- Disability insurance – an insurance plan that makes regular payments to replace income lost when illness or injury prevents the insured from working
- Insurance – a method for spreading individual risk among a large group of people to make losses more affordable for all
- Life insurance – insurance that provides funds to beneficiaries when the insured dies
- Premium – the cost (usually monthly) of an insurance policy
- Renter’s policy – insurance that protects renters from property and liability risks
- Shared liability – when accidents occur where the responsibility must be shared among the parties involved
- Term life insurance – the most common form of temporary life insurance – a life insurance policy that remains in effect for a specified period of time
- Whole life insurance – a policy for which you pay fixed premiums throughout your life, and the policy pays a stated sum at death to your beneficiary
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