You
already know that our financial habits determine our financial fate. If we avoid credit card debt, spend less than
we earn and create a financial buffer against the unexpected, we tend to thrive
financially. If we carry a lot of debt
or live constantly on the edge, with little savings, then our financial future
is much cloudier.
Recently,
a paper published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis proved these truisms
in the real world. For eight individual
years between 1992 and 2013, the Fed’s
Survey of Consumer Finances has posted a series of financial questions to
thousands of people in all walks of life, at all income levels and ages. Among them:
1)
Did you save any money last year?
2)
Did you miss any loan or mortgage payments in the last year?
3)
Did you have a balance on your credit card after the last payment was due?
4)
Do liquid assets make up at least 10% of the value of your total assets?
5)
Is your total debt service—the cash you devote each month to paying
principal and interest—less than 40% of your income?
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