The Financial Times Guide to Managing Your Money: How to be better off by making better financial decisions

The Financial Times Guide to Managing Your Money: How to be better off by making better financial decisions

by Cliff D ' Arcy (Author)

Synopsis

If you want to be better at money management, feel more secure about your financial future and be on top of your personal finances than this is the book for you. By adopting simple, everyday techniques in eight key areas, you can develop your own personal and practical approach to money management. This will help you make better decisions about both your monthly budgeting and long-term financial planning. Because finances don't have to be boring, in an informative and entertaining style, this book will: * Give you lively advice and practical examples about every aspect of money including budgeting, spending, borrowing, saving, investing and scams. * Ensure you have the basics covered in a way that is most financially beneficial for you. * Ensure you feel more confident about tackling many of life's biggest financial challenges such as buying a home, buying and running a car, holidays, marriage, the expense of raising children, sickness, unemployment and other hiccups.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Edition: 1
Publisher: Financial Times/ Prentice Hall
Published: 11 Dec 2008

ISBN 10: 0273717030
ISBN 13: 9780273717034

Author Bio

Thanks to two decades in financial services, Cliff has inside, expert knowledge on what makes financial firms tick and how they go about making money from consumers. Naturally he uses this information to

show his readers how to become richer by ditching the dirty deals!

As a freelance writer and broadcaster, he covers all aspects of personal finance from budgeting, spending, saving to insurance and stock-market investing.

The FT Guide to Managing your Money draws on lessons from his own experience of learning to get to grips with his personal finances. He turned his life around from being in debt in the late nineties to now being in the top 2% of the country for income and personal wealth.