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Money Peach

The Money Peach Podcast is a weekly show hosted by Chris Peach, the founder of the award-winning blog and personal finance website - Money Peach. What you can expect from this show: Chris Peach is an advocate for everyday people who want to know how to manage the everyday money. He believes the financial world is broken and it’s meant to be confusing - the less you know the more they (the financial world) makes. How it all started: Chris Peach was once struggling financially himself. In 2011 he was living paycheck to paycheck, facing $52,000 in consumer debt, and didn’t have a clue of what to do next. After learning the right way to manage the money and creating a plan, Chris paid of all of his debt and has never looked back. He's been showing people how to do the same ever since. Every Friday, Chris brings someone on the show to talk about money. From budgeting, to saving, to making more, and even some incredible stories to motivate your form real-life, everyday people who are winning with money. This is the show for the everyday, hard-working, people who want someone to show them what to do and how to do it...and in terms we can all understand! Welcome to the Money Peach Podcast!
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Now displaying: August, 2020
Aug 28, 2020

Wow - did someone just say that your 401k is a bad plan?

Yes.

Rebecca Walser comes on the show to share with us why your 401k isn’t just hurting you...it’s actually KILLING your financial plan.

It all started back in 1978 when the famous 401k plan was in a way created by accident. Back in the late 1970s, most employers contributed to a defined benefit plan (AKA a pension) and that cost employers a lot of money.

During this same time, tax rates were much higher than they were today and some very highly compensated executives were looking for loopholes to avoid these high taxes. What they proposed was they could be bonused out in the form of a 401k plan, which allowed them to take their bonus, dump it into a 401k plan to avoid paying the high taxes now, and then grab that bonus money at retirement when taxes were much lower.

However, a few years later businesses started catching on and realized they would save millions upon millions of dollars by getting rid of the pension plan and moving to a 401k plan. Instead of having to fund a pension for years after retirement, they could offer a company match and have the employees contribute the majority to their retirement.

And that’s how the 401k became the retirement standard in today’s world...on accident.

But, it’s not 1978 anymore. Taxes are much different than they were then, the government debt is much higher than it was then, and there is a huge problem facing social security.

How are we going to pay for social security AND how are we going to pay off this massive $23 Trillion of debt?

Is it possible that taxes could go up from their all-time lows of 2017???

Wait a minute….if taxes are at an all-time low and we forecast we may need to raise taxes in the future to pay for the government's financial mess….then does it make sense to save in a 401k today?

Are we avoiding having to pay very low taxes today so we can pay much higher taxes in retirement?

In the interview, Rebecca and I talk about:

  • Conventional financial literacy and why it’s backwards for today’s world
  • The Social Security stats: the money is going to run out
  • Taxes and how they WILL affect you later in life
  • The history of the 401k and tax loopholes it once provided
  • How 4 out of 100 Americans will retire above the poverty line
  • Where you should be investing instead of the 401k
  • How to maximize your ROTH IRA using a conversion
  • And much much more...

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Are you currently living on a plan for your life and money...AKA a budget?

The #1 habit of the most highly successful people is they are proactive. They don't wait for life and money to happen to them, they happen to their life and money.

If you haven't started yet, now is the best time to start living on a simple budget. It's time to be proactive.

Grab Free Budget Templates Here

**

Thanks so much for listening to the show and if you feel the content of this podcast was helpful, please subscribe and leave a review!

**

Today's show was brought to you by OneAZ Credit Union — my very own credit union I have been proud a member of since 2011. 

If you live in Arizona and are looking for a large credit union with a local, customer-focused feel for your personal or business banking needs, look no further than OneAZ Credit Union.

 

All the show notes, links and anything Rebecca and I mentioned can be found at https://www.moneypeach.com/session143

Aug 21, 2020

Do you get paid a little differently each month?

Maybe you are an entrepreneur, a real estate agent, in sales, or you you're a self-employed independent contractor.

If this is you, you need to learn how to budget with irregular income.

This week on the show, I am going to walk you through the 6 steps to irregular income budgeting.

This is the same system I have used in my own business when setting up a monthly budget based on fluctuating income.

Step 1: Find Your 90 Day Average Income

Step 2: Determine Your Take-Home Pay Based on Gross Income

Step 3: Open Separate Checking Account (Separate Bank)

Step 4: Choose Your Paydays

Step 5: Enter Monthly Take-Home Pay Into Budget

Step 6: Readjust Every Month Based on Last 90 Days

Once you've listened to all 6 steps, head on over to https://www.moneypeach.com/session142 to get the free budget templates I mention inside the episode.

or you can simply

Grab Free Budget Templates Here

**

Thanks so much for listening to the show and if you feel the content of this podcast was helpful, please subscribe and leave a review!

**

Today's show was brought to you by OneAZ Credit Union — my very own credit union I have been proud a member of since 2011. 

If you live in Arizona and are looking for a large credit union with a local, customer-focused feel for your personal or business banking needs, look no further than OneAZ Credit Union.

Aug 14, 2020

Today I am going to break down the exact same budget our students are currently using to save on average $500 or more each month.

A recent study shows that nearly 80% of Americans are currently living paycheck to paycheck. 

This isn't because they aren't making enough or that they're spending too much — it's because what gets measured gets managed.

On the show I will be breaking down the 7 steps below in detail and explain how they work and why each step is so important.

Step 1: Go back 90 days

Step 2: Make categories

Step 3: Enter first two steps into budget

Step 4: Zero out your budget

Step 5: Follow the plan YOU created for YOUR money

Step 6: Make adjustments

Step 7: Rinse and repeat

Once you've listened to all 7 steps, head on over to https://www.moneypeach.com/session141 to get the free budget templates I mention inside the episode.

or you can simply

Grab Free Budget Templates Here

**

Thanks so much for listening to the show and if you feel the content of this podcast was helpful, please subscribe and leave a review!

**

Today's show was brought to you by OneAZ Credit Union — my very own credit union I have been proud a member of since 2011. 

If you live in Arizona and are looking for a large credit union with a local, customer-focused feel for your personal or business banking needs, look no further than OneAZ Credit Union.

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