Student’s College Education Overpriced and Not Showing a High Return on Investment

December 23rd, 2011 by yuki 104 comments »

The student loan market relentlessly makes it way to and past the $1 trillion mark, having outstripped credit card debt, estimated at around $850 billion. According to the U.S. Department of Education, the national student loan cohort default rate increased from 7.0 percent in the fiscal year 2008 to 8.8 percent in 2009-the rate for for-profit institutions was up to 15 percent from 11.6 percent. Tuition costs as compared to other general, healthcare, and even housing indices have also been on a steady rise, up 23% since 2000, while real earnings for post-graduates-namely, the lucky few who are able to find jobs to remunerate the debt incurred while learning non-marketable skills in higher education institutions-have declined.

From dot.coms to mortgages, it would appear that student loans are the flavor of the week as for-profit schools have created a subprime education market by luring Americans into a system which provides little economic gain for students while aggrandizing and enriching the companies on Wall Street. In fact, three of the top ten holders of FFELP loans are Citibank/Student Loan Corporation, Wells Fargo/Wachovia, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, the same players responsible for the toxic mortgage lending that received trillions in taxpayer dollars as bailouts. Education has become another discredited commodity, marketed as a necessity, and gambled upon by the government and Wall Street.

Private institutions are likewise responsible for strapping students with large amounts of debt. At the University of Southern California, total tuition and fees including room and board have increased by nearly 40% in the last ten years. College officials claim that increases in tuition are being offset by increases in financial aid offers though the average paid percentage of fees only went up from 67 to 68 percent. At any rate, it makes little sense to pay for or invest in anything that is not seeing a growing rate of return. A recent article in the Huffington Post recounts that last spring, PayPal founder and investor Peter Thiel awarded $100,000 each to two young entrepreneurs to not attend college, supplementing his belief in a definite student loan bubble. The vast majority of young Americans will not be so lucky, however. Minimum wage paying jobs will await those who do graduate and default rates will continue to soar until this bubble, like all the rest before, eventually pops. We can more likely expect a slow deflate in this case, as a student education bubble poses much less of a threat to the overall economy than housing debt, but individual borrowers will doubtless face difficulties. So it would seem, invariably, that Peter Thiel has the right of it.

The education system is flawed in itself as financial education is not taught in schools. Many graduates come out of college brain washed, thinking they are entitled to a job just because they received their degree. To their disbelief they are getting a rude awakening finding that the real world job market does not have a place for inexperienced graduates within cash strapped businesses in the current economy. Companies would rather skip the initial investment of training a recent college grad versus finding someone that already has been trained for the same wage. This is even more of a reason to start thinking like an Entrepreneur and start to take control of your own financial future. There are over a million ways to make money being self-employed. If you learn the skillset of how to make money on your own without a J.O.B. (Just Over Broke), you will forever be financially stable.

What You Need To Know About Forex Affiliate Programs

December 23rd, 2011 by yuki No comments »

The net is among the most successful business platforms today. It provides a new platform for old practices such as foreign exchange and options and stock trading to succeed in a new market. Online trading is really a valuable enterprise, and more people are beginning to realize it. You don’t need to be a business expert to make money out of the investment opportunities available online. One of the latest online business trends are forex affiliate programs.

A forex affiliate program is a joint venture between a website owner and a forex broker. It is an opportunity which allows webmasters to generate money simply by promoting the services of a broker on their website. Essentially, the partnership allows both parties to profit. The provider produces revenue from the leads furnished by the forex affiliate. Likewise, the affiliate earns a profit from the commission offered by the foreign exchange provider.

The idea might seem a little bit overwhelming at the outset, particularly for those who have no prior experience. Becoming a forex affiliate is actually simple. If your website yields a sizable amount of traffic, you can use this opportunity to bring in extra income. All you got to do is market the forex provider on your site. You get money when a visitor reaches the provider’s website through yours and turns into a trader. This is called a conversion.

Research shows the foreign exchange market has a daily turnout rate of almost four hundred trillion dollars. It is a market booming with so much potential and a forex affiliate program lets ordinary people who don’t necessarily specialize in the area to make money.

Getting Started

It’s vital for you to investigate before making any investments. This enterprise continues to gain momentum. As a result, there are now quite a few providers, most of which can be located on the net. Remember that some brokers are certainly more dependable than others. Do not make any hasty decisions. If you stumbled upon a broker you are interested in joining up with, don’t sign up immediately. Take time out to investigate the company’s history.

It’s also best if you find out about how the broker pays out. Commission varies according to broker. Some pay a set price for every single trader brought in, while others have a cost-per-action type of system. These are definitely critical elements you should iron out in order to generate profit. Remember that the business is carried out online, but the payout comes in the real world.

Is It “Safe” to View and Pay Bills Online?

November 23rd, 2011 by yuki 98 comments »

Perhaps the very first test of potential “riskiness” when using any electronic presentment and payment (or EBPP for short) web site is whether it is secure. The vast majority of web page addresses, also known as URLs, typically begin with “http.” However, to pay bills online, the web page should always start with “https,” which signifies a secure socket layer or SSL connection (or one in which data is fully encrypted). This typically means that you can see a padlock icon, usually in the top or bottom corner of the browser window (or in some cases it may even turn the URL address background green or light blue). Clicking the padlock icon will often reveal the site’s security certificate (and allow you to read about the particular protection that this affords).

Now that a consumer knows that he or she is on a secure site, the next step is to ensure that the login process is secure. A good site will usually give a consumer two options-to pay instantly or as a guest, and to register on the site to use it again and save time on the next occasion the consumer uses it. As a guest, a web site will typically only ask for an email address and then ask a consumer how he or she would like to pay from the options they make available. This may mean entering debit or credit card details for example, which should then give a consumer the option to confirm the transaction (and then as a further security step run the transaction through 3D secure-a process used by major credit card companies as an added XML layer for online credit and debit card transactions. Visa call this process “Verified by Visa”, MasterCard call it “MasterCard SecureCode”, JCB International call it “J/Secure” and American Express call this “SafeKey”. Overall then, a well-constructed site will offer a safe payment system for consumers (and there are card and bank protections on fraud and low limitations on consumer liability in any case). Even so, consumers should also look for extra safety in specific statements on any given EBPP site about PCI compliance (or payment card industry standard adherence) and/or that credit/debit card data or numbers will not be stored or saved in any way (and if they are, that they will be fully encrypted and tokenised as a further protection against theft or fraud).