December 2006
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In this Special Holiday Issue: Holiday Tips 10 Mistakes You Can't Afford Top 10 Year End Tax Tips (Please feel free to post comments about this newsletter at the bottom of the newsletter.)
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Holiday Tips
With all the stress, expense, and expectation surrounding the
Laying the Groundwork Starting slow and making gradual changes to entertaining and gift-giving rituals is the best rule of thumb. It may be too late to significantly re-think your family’s routine this year, but you can still set realistic goals (like hand making just two or three gifts!) and make other seasonal tasks more fun.
Host a cookie swap. Everyone loves cookies, but who really enjoys the giant, goopy mess of mixing a gazillion different kinds? Instead, bake in bulk and share. Six friends who each make six dozen of the same kind of cookies can meet for coffee and go home with a dozen of each kind.
Have a card party. Skip the poker and invite friends over to fill out your holiday cards instead. It won’t save you time, but it will turn an often tedious activity into a social gathering at a time when you might otherwise be too busy to see your friends!
Noncommercial Gift Ideas Here are more clever ways to add meaning to your gift list while keeping costs low:
Frame a picture of the family home. Send it to distant friends and relatives who can’t make it home for the holidays as a special reminder that they are missed.
Make an emergency kit for the car or the walk home. Do you know someone with an unreliable car? Create a gift basket with a blanket, flashlight, gas can, jumper cables, and flares. Does your friend walk home from work or class after dark? Give peace of mind with pepper spray, a whistle, and a prepaid calling card.
Give the gift of reconnection. Call an estranged friend or write a letter to someone you haven’t seen in a few years.
Creative Reuse Here are a few ways to make the time-honored tradition of secondhand giving easier and more fun:
Have a re-gift swap. We all have gift-quality things in our closets that we don’t actually use. Gather a few like-minded friends, wipe the dust of those valuable but neglected items, and trade around.
Share a love of reading. Give away the last great book you bought and enjoyed to someone who shares your taste. You’ll get to talk about the story the next time you see each other, and you can always reread a copy at the library.
Get crafty Stop throwing out corks and use them to make decorations. Skewer corks on strands of wire, alternating them with different kinds of beads, and twisting them into ornaments and garlands which can be hung around your home and given away as clever novelty gifts for fellow wine-lovers. With creative flair, other items that reflect your interests can also give a unique twist to holiday fare.
Wrapping Don’t add to the glut of pricey papers and bows in landfills this year. A few beautiful alternatives you probably already have around the house include: kids’ artwork, maps and travel brochures from favorite vacations, magazines, old comics, silk scarves, and fabric remnants. Gifts for the kitchen can be folded in cloth napkins or collected in a picnic basket and wrapped in a tablecloth.
Scaling back at the holidays takes a little effort at first, but can be deeply rewarding, leaving more time for family, faith, or just some extra sleep. Regardless of what you celebrate, best wishes keeping it simple, sane, and truly fun.
10 Mistakes You Can't Afford Most advice columns tell you how you should do things. But there are all kinds of things you shouldn't do, either. Here are 10 frequent financial mistakes that consumers routinely make — and you should avoid. Don't:
Top 10 Year-End Tax Tips Despite the year's end looming, your tax fate is not yet sealed - there are still some chances to optimize your tax filing and save some money.
1. Live energy efficient The government is keen towards those who build green. If you're going to make your home more energy efficient within the next two years, you can get up to $500 in tax credits. If you're going to build a home that uses 50 percent less in heating and cooling costs than other homes, you can get up to $2,000 in tax credits if it is completed after August 8, 2005.
2. Do a tax projection The Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), that vestige of the tax system passed in 1970, was meant to target only high income individuals who were subject to many exemptions. But as incomes rise, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that soon one in five taxpayers will be forced to pay it. To figure out if you'll be hit, do a full tax projection and you'll be able to see whether you should pick up the pace of deductions - or defer them.
3. Figure out your income and deductions The most basic year-end move is to adjust the timing of income and deductions. If your income is expected to come in high, you can delay some of it until the next calendar year to save taxes. You can also accelerate payment of deductible expenses like job hunting costs or dues of professional organizations.
4. Postpone that bonus If you know you've got a bonus coming, look into having your boss postpone the big check until January. You can't defer the bonus being taxed by simply not depositing the check until later. If you expect you're going to be forced to pay the AMT this year, consider accelerating the current year's income to mitigate the negative aspects of the tax.
5. Sock away some for retirement A great way to put money away for the future is a deductible Individual Retirement Account (IRA). A conventional IRA will defer taxes as your investments grow, while a Roth IRA is actually tax-free. You have until April 15 to open an IRA and make a deductible contribution for the prior year. And if you have a 401K plan at work, put in as much as you're allowed to.
6. Pay off those deductible expenses before year's end If you pay off your state taxes or property taxes early, that accelerates your federal deductions. You can make an extra mortgage payment (the interest is deductible), or go for that dental work or surgery before year's end.
7. Give it to charity If you give cash to a charity, you can deduct it for the current year. If you give property, you are usually allowed to deduct the full market value. For more expensive donations, look into getting an appraisal to determine the fair value of your property.
8. Give gifts to children If you give that gift to children or other relatives before the year is out, make sure to have that check clear by December 31st. Gifts up to $12,000 per person need not be reported.
9. Offset your capital gains Take a long look at your investment portfolio to determine whether you should sell some losers before year's end to offset your capital gains this year. Capital losses are put together with capital gains, but are also deductible against up to $3,000 in income a year.
10. Marriage helps Even if you get hitched at 11:59 p.m. on December 31st, the government considers you married for the whole year.
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holiday season, it can be a challenge to get through “the most wonderful time of the year” with our values and our wallets intact. Here are a few ideas for you to make sure your holiday doesn't lose its meaning.





