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Imagine this scenario. In your twenties you work for a small start-up company. You work your way up the ladder as the company grows. In addition to salary increases you collect more and more stock options, too. Then, just as you turn 30 your company sells — making you incredibly wealthy in the process. So wealthy, in fact, that you decide to retire! Whoo-hoo!
That’s what happened to author Kim Snider… but the story didn’t end there.
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Is a 4-year-old too young to begin receiving a weekly allowance? Am I trying to jump-start my daughter’s little life with the complications of money? Read More »
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Nan Mooney's book "Not Keeping Up with Our Parents" describes the decline of the professional middle class in America and points to a few key reasons our generation is faltering when it comes to money-matters.
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Apparently, it has little to do with cutting out lattes:
1. Homeownership no longer means stability -- We may own houses, big houses, but we own less of them as a percentage than prior generations.
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