Weekly Link Round-up For August 27, 2010

Posted on August 27, 2010 by

This week on @blueleaf we posted two articles on loving your career, “Love Or Money – Which Do You Work For?” and “Money Matters But Money Isn’t Everything.”

My viewpoint as a college student: The way I see it, if I don’t fall in love with my future career (or at least like it), I’ll have less money for retirement in the end. The more I will hate my career, the more I will spend on lavish vacations and conveniences to make my time away from work more fruitful. The more stressed out I will be. The more stressed out my family will be. The more I’ll spend on shopping, make-up, designer clothes, foot rubs, therapy, and who knows what else? Choosing wisely early on will be a good investment.

Below is a round-up of the articles we posted this week on @blueleaf. Enjoy!

Why I Don’t Chase The Highest Interest Rate - Consumerism Commentary

Why Are College Students Stressing About The Economy – The Financial Blogger

Love Or Money – Which Do You Work For? – Fiscal Geek

How To Beat Inflation - Cash Money Life

Fiscal Austerity and “Third World America” – Baseline Scenario

TIPS Vs. Nominal Treasury Bonds – Oblivious Investor

The Tax Consequences Of Lucky Breaks – Bucks

What Makes The News? Not Accuracy! – Barel Karsan

How To Get Ahead Financially As A College Student - Grad Money Matters

Top Mistakes Young Families Make – Bible Money Matters

Thoughts About Marriage Roundup – Personal Finance By The Book

Money Matters But Money Isn’t Everything – Moneyning

Why Americans Can’t Afford To Die – Go Banking Rates

How Much Long Term Care Insurance Should You Have? - Go To Retirement

Trillion Dollar Public Pension Shortfall – Hope To Prosper

What You Need To Know About Stock Market Volatility – Consumer Boomer

Who Would Make The Best Use Of Billions – Bill Gates Or The US Govt? – Darwin’s Finance

How To Go Broke In The Market – The Motley Fool

Why Invest In Bonds? – Free From Broke

How Credit Unions Differ From Banks - Cash Money Life

Have a great weekend!

Photo by: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ecstaticist/ / CC BY-SA 2.o

Eva Sadej

As a college student, Eva bought her first individual stocks in January 2010 after doing substantial fundamental analysis on the companies. She is interested in personal finance and investor behavior, and hopes to help others make sense of their financial future through writing. Read More

  • Bret @ Hope to Prosper

    Thanks for linking to my article.