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Secrets to Safe Investing - What you really need to know about investing and your investment account that no one tells you.

Secrets to Safe Investing - What you really need to know about investing and your investment account that no one tells you.Author: Levi Serrgott
Category: eBooks


This item is no longer available


Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: First

ASIN: B003CJU15U

Publication Date: March 5, 2010

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
There are many books that try to sell you investing methods and get rich quick schemes. But there are few if any that tell you how to ensure you protect your hard earned money from the methods investment firms and financial advisors use to erode your wealth or even worse steal from you.

Secrets to Safe Investing - What you really need to know about investing and your investment account that no one tells you has been written by an industry insider who has seen many of the abuses that can cause investors to pay more commissions than they should, invest in risky ventures, and sometimes end up losing their money to unscrupulous
business practices and individuals.

In this book you will learn how investment firms and financial advisors can and do take advantage of investors and more importantly you will learn how to avoid and counter these tactics to your advantage. While the information cannot guarantee you will never be a victim it should help to significantly reduce the chances of being taken advantage of
or succumbing to financial fraud.


Worthwhile Reading

Myths and Realities about Working Longer
Alicia H. Munnell and Steven Sass. 2008. “Working Longer: The Solution to the Retirement Income Challenge.” Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.
For more information, contact Andrew Eschtruth at 617-552-1729 or eschtrut@bc.edu.

Myth: Given the growing retirement income challenge, people will have to work forever. Reality: If individuals worked full time until at least 66, they could enjoy a long and financially secure retirement, with incomes one-third higher than if they retired at 62.

Myth: Older workers will choose to work longer on their own. Reality: Most people retire as soon as benefits are available at age 62.

Myth: As baby boomers approach retirement, employers will embrace older workers. Reality: Many employers are lukewarm toward retaining older workers due to concerns that they cost too much, lack current skills, and don’t plan to stick around long.

Myth: Employers will quickly change their tune in response to labor shortages. Reality: Many employers with a high proportion of older workers are in declining industries. Others can tap global labor markets.

Myth: Older workers have little to offer employers. Reality: Older workers often have advantages over younger workers — including higher productivity, better judgment, a stronger work ethic, and better people skills.

Myth: Phased retirement — shifting to part-time employment with a career employer — is the solution for keeping people in the workforce longer. Reality: Many firms are reluctant to offer phased retirement due to concerns over which workers would be eligible, health insurance costs, and part-time schedules.

Myth: Most workers can work longer by remaining with their career employer. Reality: Career employment is declining fast — only 44 percent of male workers age 58-62 are still with their age-50 employer, down from 70 percent two decades ago.

Myth: The working longer prescription is the answer for everyone. Reality: While today’s older workers are generally healthier and better educated, up to a third could be hard pressed to work into their mid-60s due to poor health or job prospects.

Myth: Government cannot do much to encourage longer work lives. Reality: Raising Social Securitys earliest eligibility age of 62 could push back the work-retirement divide by changing the mindset of both workers and employers.

Myth: Eliminating mandatory retirement removed a major barrier to working longer. Reality: Mandatory retirement could actually promote longer work lives by providing both employers and workers clear expectations about when careers end.

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Retirement Facts
Whether a worker is offered and participates in a retirement plan at work depends greatly on what type of worker the person is: • Public-sector workers have the highest level of participation in a retirement plan (75.8% in 2004), while parttime workers typically are not offered a retirement plan or rarely participate when they are. • Among all workers, less than half (41.9% in 2004) participate in a retirement plan. • Among full-time, full-year wage and salary workers, more than half (56.6% in 2004) participate in a retirement plan.
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