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67 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb text on a vital topic- basics everyone should know
Personally, I think that we would all be better off if we spent more time in our education process teaching people about the realities of their economic lives. This is especially true of their choice of careers, managing those resources, and preparing for their "golden years". I could nominate a few topics I think we could cease teaching in order to have room for the...
Published on March 4, 2005 by Craig Matteson

versus
1.0 out of 5 stars incorrect code
ordered this book and it said it came with a student access code, it did but not a valid one. Still trying to find how to contact them to get one that works.
Published 1 month ago by kat


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67 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb text on a vital topic- basics everyone should know, March 4, 2005
Personally, I think that we would all be better off if we spent more time in our education process teaching people about the realities of their economic lives. This is especially true of their choice of careers, managing those resources, and preparing for their "golden years". I could nominate a few topics I think we could cease teaching in order to have room for the necessary classes to provide people with real life financial management skills that can have a direct impact on the improvement of all aspects of their lives.

This book, "Personal Finance - Turning Money into Wealth" is a fantastic tool for students and ANY interested reader. I wish everyone would work through this book (or one very much like it). While it is never too late to develop these skills, the younger a person gets a plan for their economic life in place, the more power it has and the better off they will be long term.

I like the way Prof. Keown emphasizes basic principles (he has 15 of them) and planning. He begins the book by providing the foundation of financial planning, teaching the student how to measure their financial health and using that to inform their plan, understanding the Time Value of Money (a topic so vital that no one should graduate high school without knowing, in my opinion), and the basics of tax planning.

The author then provides some great information on managing money by understanding the realities of cash and liquid assets, credit cards (open credit) and the traps it represents, using consumer loans in PLANNED BORROWING (another important topic that is almost unknown to most consumers because of the misuse of open credit), and buying homes and automobiles.

I really enjoyed his next discussion on insurance. He talks about the various kinds of insurance, the kinds of protection they provide at what costs, and especially the situations in which buying insurance makes sense and when it does not.

The section on managing investments is good, solid, but BASIC information. Anyone doing anything beyond a few basic retirement plans will need to study other materials. This section is the one where I have a tiny quibble with the author. He differentiates investing and speculation by saying that investing involves putting money in assets that provide returns - stocks, bonds, etc - but that speculating is putting money in things like baseball cards that only have a price based on what others are willing to pay. I sort of understand what I think he is trying to say.

However, all investing is in some sense speculating. The buyer and seller have different views of the future (speculating about the future) and so they make opposite choices at a certain price. Either of them would change their view, presumably, at some other price. Stocks do not have a built in return and many do not pay dividends and too often nowadays their residual value is zero. Too often people buy stocks simply because they are going up (the greater fool theory) and get badly burned as we saw in the Internet Bubble collapse in early 2000. In any case, the caution the author advocates is sufficient and sound. I am just concerned that others use the terms "investment" and "speculation" differently than the author and might confuse those trying to enter the fray for the first time.

This fine text ends with a discussion of life cycle issues such as retirement planning, estate planning, and how all the pieces studied fit together into the grand plan.

The author also provides online helps such as problems, quizzes, and especially many useful spreadsheets that the student can not only use, but study to help them build their own that will be tailored to the student's specific situation. There is also a workbook with the basics of using a financial calculator and the worksheets called for in the text.

This is a superb text on a vital topic. Strongly Recommended for general readers as well as students in a class on this subject (which EVERY college student should be REQUIRED to take - or pass out of by test).
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Primer on Where Your Money Goes, April 6, 2008
By 
Starslate (Tulsa, Oklahoma United States) - See all my reviews
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I don't generally keep textbooks but this is one that I will hold onto for quite some time. This book has been completely worth it and I keep referring back to it as I have been out of college.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Textbook, March 4, 2011
By 
Michael Adrian (Culver City, CA, US) - See all my reviews
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The book was exactly what I needed for my class and at a great price, shipping included. The book covers a series of topics, allowing the reader to eventually take full control of their finances. The only voiced concern thus far regarding the textbook from my classmates and I has been the dating of the book. Laws and options are always changing, especially tax laws. The textbook goes over taxes and other areas with forms and statistics dated between 2005 ad 2008. As long as the reader is willing to look up recent changes in the dated areas, all will be well and much will be learned.
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1.0 out of 5 stars incorrect code, January 18, 2012
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ordered this book and it said it came with a student access code, it did but not a valid one. Still trying to find how to contact them to get one that works.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinarily clear and useful; some weaknesses too, December 29, 2011
By 
David Roth (Oakland, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Keown's Personal Finance text is fantastic. It covers the main topics in personal finance thoroughly. It interweaves case studies with principles and institutional issues. The book covers investing, real estate, taxes, the labor market, insurance, and much more.

The book suffers from a weakness of all textbooks in today's world: There is actually far too much information on most topics because authors are more or less forced to cover everything anyone might ever want to cover, rather than making sensible decisions about what to leave out.

Also, since I teach economics, I wish there were more economic content and background for many topics. For example, the book does not say anything about the basic economic rationale behind buying insurance, from which we could learn quickly that there is never any sense insuring small losses such as buying an extended warranty for a TV or other electronic goods.

The book also does not discuss the public policy issues related to many topics, such as taxes. For example, in my economics classes I discuss in great detail issues around progressive taxation--incentives, redistribution, fairness--but this book doesn't take any time out from the bare bones personal finance. I'd like to see some integration of economic ideas and context into this otherwise excellent book.
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1.0 out of 5 stars This Company Is Doing To Much Business To Need Anymore of My Money, December 27, 2011
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I bought text books for Christmas so my daughter wouldn't have to shell out massive amounts that stores like this over charge for them. I got the wrong book and was told this company has a 7 day return policy and never on workbooks. Thanks a lot and Merry Christmas to you to.
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4.0 out of 5 stars pay attention..., November 13, 2011
By 
J. Rubino (Simi Valley,Ca USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
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Okay, so I looked through about seven or eight reviews before I bought this book. The reviews were positive and the subject matter is one
I have been interested for many years.

I added this book to my library of personal finance books to broaden my knowledge and understanding of the subject. Oops!!! I bought
a used textbook. Yep, I didn't even realize after reading through the reviews that this was a college textbook.

So while it has a tremendous amount of useful information it is a textbook without a class environment or feedback. Useful perhaps
but not the book I thought I was buying. So pay attention unlike I didn't.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great information even though it's an old edition, August 10, 2011
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I sure wish I would have studied this in high school. I have 3 graduate degrees and can't believe I didn't know much of what is taught in this book. I highly recommend this book to everyone who hasn't had a personal finance class, especially young adults. It seems like the old edition has all the essential and is sold at a very reasonable price.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Old edition, February 15, 2011
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The workbook is for an old edition, but most of the work sheets are the same. You can get them online at the text book cite anyway.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love it!, August 26, 2010
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The book came super fast and the book condition is perfect.
Thnak you! I would definitely use this vendor again.
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Personal Finance
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