The New Rules of Money: A Playbook for Planning Your Financial Future: A Workbook
By (Author) Wall Street Journal
By (author) Bourree Lam
By (author) Julia Carpenter
Potter/Ten Speed/Harmony/Rodale
Clarkson Potter
3rd January 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
Management accounting, bookkeeping and auditing
Budgeting and financial management
Advice on careers and achieving success
332.024
Paperback
208
Width 204mm, Height 229mm, Spine 27mm
618g
Overcome your fears of money, break old spending habits, and become more mindful of your personal finances with this fun, illustrated workbook from the Wall Street Journal. The personal-finance playbook followed by past generations doesn't add up in today's world. In a market where buying a first home can feel out of reach thanks to sky-high housing prices and mortgage rates and investing seem so complicated, it's time for some new money rules! WSJ personal finance reporters Bourree Lam and Julia Carpenter help you start where you are. Use these pages to- Clarify your money goals, and make a plan for sticking with themWrap your head around your numbers with a simple financial worksheetDevelop helpful money habits (and get rid of the unhelpful ones!)Find out how to save and how much you should be saving Understand how to invest in the market with low-cost index fundsKnow how to find a good financial advisor (and what questions you should be asking)Learn some money mantras to gain confidence and steel yourself against hard timesAnd more!Whether you're just getting ready to start paying back student loans or you're well into saving for retirement (but not sure if you're saving enough), The New Rules of Money's worksheets, check lists, quizzes, and other interactive learning tools will help you gain clarity on what you're spending your money on and why you want to save, so you can (finally!) reach your financial goals.
Bourree Lam is the Deputy Coverage Chief of The Wall Street Journal's Life & Work section. She's led the coverage of personal finance topics with an emphasis on accessibility at WSJ, Refinery29, and The Atlantic. She loves to talk about money with pretty much anyone. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and son. Julia Carpenter is a reporter at The Wall Street Journal. She writes about money, culture, social change, and the points at which all these things collide. She lives in New York City with her girlfriend and their rescue dog, Gigi.