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Econ 2.08

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Career: Computer Scientist Income (before tax) $120,000.00 Total Yearly Budget $65,000 Total Yearly Expenses $54,381 Net Income (after tax) $86,016.25 Difference (net income minus expenses) $31,635.25 Entertainment Yearly Cost Video/DVD ?$20 Vacation ?$700 Other ?$300 Subtotals ?$1020 Other Credit Debt Yearly Cost Student Loan ?$6,000 Credit Card ?$500 Credit Card ?$500 Other ?$300 Subtotals ?$7,300 Utilities Yearly Cost Phone and/or Cell Phone ?$720 Cable and Internet ?$840 Electric and Gas ?$1220 Water and Sewer ?$650 Waste Removal ?$300 Subtotals ?$3730 Personal Care Yearly Cost Health Insurance ?$3,420 Other Medical Costs ?$400 Hair/Nails ?$50 Clothing & Laundry ?$300 Health Club

1ac_critical_financial_surveillance_pedagogy_-_ddi_2015_ks.docx

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Credit reporting is a pervasive but overlooked form of financial surveillance that investigates and commoditizes individuals Josh Lauer, doctoral candidate at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication, April 2008, Technology and Culture Volume 49 Number 2, ?From Rumor to Written Record: Credit Reporting and the Invention of Financial Identity in Nineteenth-Century America,? http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/tech/summary/v049/49.2.lauer.html

Bank Comparison

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M3 A2 Eric Mackey Which bank is Best Step 1: Using the large National Bank, the Regional/Local Bank, and the Credit Union you identified in the Module 1 Assignment 2, compare and contrast each institution by completing the Module 3 Assignment 2 template. Step 2: Once you have completed the Module 3 Assignment 2? template, create a financial portfolio. This financial portfolio is a professional one. Please follow the following instructions when preparing it: Identify, describe, and explain the financial institution that would be the best fit for you. Be sure to justify your selection by referencing the information collected in your completed template.

AP Economics Chapter 4 and 6 notes

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Chapter 4 Notes, Economics Sect 1 Credit: the receiving of funds either directly or indirectly to buy goods and services today with the promise to pay for them in the future. The amount owed ? the debt ? is equal to the principal plus interest Principal: the amount originally borrowed in a loan Interest: the amount the borrower must pay for the use of someone else?s (the bank?s, credit union?s, stores, etc.) funds. Installment Debt: one of the most common types of debt today. Consumers repay this type of loan with equal payments, or installments, over a period of time. Ex. 36 equal payments over 36 months Durable Goods: manufactured items that last longer than 3 years, on an installment plan. Many are bought on an installment plan.
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