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Fixed Expenses
Expenses that cost the same amount every time.
Credit/Rating Score
A measure of creditworthiness based on an analysis of the consumer's financial history, often computed as a numerical score, using the FICO or other scoring systems to analyze the consumer's credit.
Credit
Amount of money a creditor is willing to loan another to purchase goods and services, based on trust and the expectation that the money will be repaid as promised with interest.
Insurance Premium
The payment a person makes to an insurance company in exchange for its promise of protection and help.
Annual Percentage Rate(APR)
The finance charge or total amount it costs per year to use credit, calculated as a percentage of the amount borrowed, including interest, transaction fees and service charges.
Variable Expenses
Expenses that are not fixed.
Capital
The value of personal items that one owns, including savings, investments and property.
Credit Union
A financial institution owned by its members that provides savings and checking accounts and other services to its membership at low fees.
Net Income
Also called "take home pay," it's the amount of income left after payroll deductions.
Appreciation
A rise in value or price.
Savings
Money set aside for short-term goals.
Annual Fee
The amount that credit card companies charge for the use of a credit card.
Debit Card
A card used to pay for goods and services directly from a checking account by transferring funds electronically from one's checking account to the store's account to pay for a purchase.
Revolving Credit
An open-ended account with a limit to how much can be borrowed but no time limit for repayment.
Credit Report
A written record collected by a credit agency that tracks a borrower's credit payments, whether or not the payments are made on a timely basis and how long the borrower has had various credit accounts.
Withholding
Employer deductions from employees' earnings to pay employees' taxes.
Identity Theft
When someone uses your name, social security number, credit card number and/or other personal information without your permission.
Bankruptcy
Legal process for selling most of the debtor's property to help satisfy debts that cannot be repaid, in exchange for relieving debtors of the responsibility of paying their financial obligations or protecting them while a plan is created and they try to repay debts.
Deductible
The amount of a loss you must pay out of your own pocket before the insurance company will step in and pay the rest.
Principal
The amount of money someone is willing to loan you. Also, the amount that is still owned on a loan.
Pay Yourself First
Disciplined saving or setting aside money as a regular part of the budget for later spending or investing.
Checking Account
A bank or credit union account that allows withdrawals by writing a check or using a debit card associated with the account.
Return
Earnings from an investment, usually expressed as an annual percentage rate.
Finance Charges
The interest paid on unpaid credit balances.
Liquidity
The ease with which an asset can be converted to cash without serious loss.
Diversification
Distributing funds among different types of investments to minimize overall risk.
Gross income
The total amount of income from wages before any payroll deductions.
Mutual Fund
An investment security that is actually a diversified portfolio of equities, bonds or other
Dividend
The portion of the profits paid to the shareholders of a company.
Credit Card
Card that enables holder to charge expenses for purchases or to get money, often with interest.
Yield
The profit from an investment.
Budget
A plan for managing money, dividing up expected income and expenses among spending and saving options based on personal goals during a given time period.
Mutual Fund
An investment security that is actually a diversified portfolio of equities, bonds or other securities. Investors purchase shares and can sell them at any time.
Debt
The entire amount of money owned to lenders.
Employee Benefits
Additional benefits, beyond a paycheck, offered by employers (e.g., health insurance, retirement plan).
Assets
What a person owns, such as cash, stocks, bonds, real estate and personal possessions.
Investment
Setting aside money for future income, benefit, or profit to meet long-term goal
Savings account
An account you have at a financial institution that helps you accumulate and save money and earn interest at the same time.
Taxes
A compulsory payment by individuals/organizations to the government
Spending
Using income for current consumption.