Stock Quote

 

Money Market Checking Account



Money Shouts by Mark Green,

Money Shouts by Mark Green,
With CEOs and corporations currently under fire for years of outrageous deception and fraud, the time is long overdue for an accounting of just how grievously special-interest money has infiltrated our political process. Now, longtime political watchdog (and recent political candidate) Mark Green offers just that. In "Selling Out, Green exposes the truth about the poisonous role money has come to play in our political culture -- a role that has too long been conveniently overlooked. The practice of trading campaign donations for political favors, he reminds us, is as old as the nation itself. And yet in recent years the American political landscape has become an open market, where influence is bought and sold wholesale, with little accountability and no apparent shame. How did Enron and so many other corporations buy political protection? Why do legislators pay more attention to contributors than to constituents? "Our textbook system of checks and balances," answers Green, "has devolved into a system of checks, checks, and more checks-and few politicians bite the hand that funds them." Government today, he argues, is a system that produces loopholes and subsidies for the 1 percent of Americans who can afford to be big donors -- and produces exorbitant health-care costs, uncontrolled pollution, and underfunded schools for the rest of us, As a candidate who himself raised $16 million in his campaign for mayor of New York City, Green has seen the political process as both critic and participant. Drawing on interviews with dozens of other major players and his own lifelong crusade for better government, he highlights an array of eye-opening case studies linking money andresults-from how senators favor big-industry polluters over their own constituents to how the wealthiest have won big tax breaks even as CEOs' salaries have increased ten times faster than their employees'.



How to Rescue Our Financial Life by Kimberly Lankford, X
How to Rescue Our Financial Life by Kimberly Lankford, X
Strategies You Can Implement Today to Jump-start Your Investments, Lower Your Taxes, Slash Your Insurance Bills, and More Have recent market debacles brought your high-flying financial accounts crashing back to earth? Are you unsure of what steps you must take to get them moving again? Rescue Your Financial Life provides the tips, tactics, and answers you need. Utilizing an easy-to-follow program, Kiplinger's Personal Finance columnist Kimberly Lankford shows you how to review every aspect of your financial picture and reformulate your short- and long-term goals, then explains what you must do to reach those goals as quickly and painlessly as possible. Packed with simple, real-world rules for making today's markets work for you, Rescue Your Financial Life will give you the knowledge you need to: Squeeze as much money as possible from every account you have, from checking and savings to mutual funds, 401(k)s, credit cards, and more Gain every profitable advantage from today's state-of-the-art financial tools and technologies Implement defensive safeguards to prevent being blindsided by future financial surprises You are closer than you think to achieving all of your financial goals. Let Rescue Your Financial Life show you how you can start today to energize your retirement plans, eliminate debt without mortgaging your future, and get back on track to achieving your financial goals. Kimberly Lankford is a contributing editor and columnist for Kiplinger's Personal Finance and Kiplinger.com, where she writes the popular "Ask Kim" column. Lankford has been featured on NBC's Today, ABC World News, and CNN, as well as The Boston Globe, Reader's Digest, and other print and broadcastmedia outlets.



Money market deposit account - In the United States, a Money Market Deposit Account is a bank deposit that is considered a savings account for some purposes, but upon which checks can typically be written, subject to certain restrictions.

Money market - The money market is the financial market for short-term borrowing and lending, typically up to one year. This contrasts with the capital market for longer-term funds.

E-check - An e-Check is an electronic transfer of funds in which the money is taken from a bank account, typically a checking account. The account's routing number and account number are used, and funds drawn from the account.

Money fund - Money funds (or money market funds, money market mutual funds) are mutual funds that invest in short-term debt instruments. They provide the benefit of pooled investments, as investors can participate in a more diverse and high-quality portfolio than they otherwise could individually.



moneymarketcheckingaccount



© 2006 ST6.INSUREFINANCEXPENSE.COM. All rights reserved.