Monday, July 1, 2013

PFT: Gay former NFL player felt safest at work

Dallas Cowboys v Washington RedskinsGetty Images

We?re rolling out our own list of the Top 100 players in the NFL this month, with the first 25 names unveiled today.

Although this wasn?t our intention (the list is ordered solely based on the way our panel of NFL media members cast their votes), the first name we?re unveiling, at No. 76, happens to be a player whose presence on the list will be the subject of a great deal of debate. We?re sure plenty of you will agree, plenty will disagree, and you?ll have a lot to say in the comments.

The Bottom 25 of PFT?s Top 100 are below.

76 Tony Romo, quarterback, Cowboys

77 Doug Martin, running back, Buccaneers

78 Frank Gore, running back, 49ers

79 Carl Nicks, guard, Buccaneers

80 Maurice Jones-Drew, running back, Jaguars

81 Vernon Davis, tight end, 49ers

82 Evan Mathis, guard, Eagles

83 Alfred Morris, running back, Redskins

84 Joe Haden, cornerback, Browns

85 C.J. Spiller, running back, Bills

86 Calais Campbell, defensive end, Cardinals

87 Matthew Stafford, quarterback, Lions

88 Antonio Cromartie, cornerback, Jets

89 Jason Peters, offensive tackle, Eagles

90 Jordan Gross, offensive tackle, Panthers

91 Mike Pouncey, center, Dolphins

92 Mike Wallace, receiver, Dolphins

93 Reggie Wayne, receiver, Colts

94 Ed Reed, safety, Texans

95 Henry Melton, defensive tackle, Bears

96 Lance Briggs, linebacker, Bears

97 Steve Smith, receiver, Panthers

98 Antoine Winfield, cornerback, Seahawks

99 Max Unger, center, Seahawks

100 Matt Forte, running back, Bears

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/30/gay-former-nfl-player-said-he-felt-safest-at-work/related/

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Obama: S. Africa shows how people can change world

By NEDRA PICKLER and JULIE PACE
Associated Press

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - President Barack Obama challenged young Africans to rise to the challenge of shoring up progress on the continent that rests on a "fragile foundation," summoning them to fulfill the legacy of South Africa's beloved former leader Nelson Mandela.

In his own effort to carve out a piece of that legacy, Obama announced a new U.S.-led initiative to double access to electric power across Africa, vowing to help bring "light where there is currently darkness."

"Nelson Mandela showed us that one man's courage can move the world," Obama said during an evening speech Sunday at the University of Cape Town.

Obama's remarks capped an emotional day that included a visit to the Robben Island prison where Mandela spent 18 of his 27 years in prison. The 94-year-old anti-apartheid hero has been in hospital for most of this month and is said to be in critical condition.

In deeply personal remarks, the U.S. president spoke of standing in Mandela's cramped prison cell with his two young daughters, Malia and Sasha.

"Seeing them stand within the walls that once surrounded Nelson Mandela, I knew this was an experience they would never forget," he said. "I knew they now appreciated a little bit more that Madiba and other had made for freedom," Obama added, referring to Mandela by his clan name.

Obama address came nearly 50 years after Robert F. Kennedy delivered his famous "Ripple of Hope" speech at the same university, an address that Obama aides said helped inspire the president's remarks. Kennedy's speech, delivered soon after Mandela was sentenced to prison, called on young people to launch a fight against injustice, creating ripples of hope that would "build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance."

Laying out his own vision for development on the continent where his father was born, Obama said the U.S. seeks "a partnership that empowers Africans to access greater opportunity in their own lives." He dismissed the notion that the U.S. sought to meddle in Africa's affairs, saying his country would benefit from the continent's ability to manage its own affairs - economically, politically and militarily.

"Ultimately I believe Africans should make up their own minds about what serves African interests," he said. "We trust your judgment, the judgment of ordinary people. We believe that when you control your destiny - if you got a handle on your governments - then governments will promote freedom and opportunity, because that will serve you."

The White House says Obama's electricity initiative, dubbed "Power Africa," symbolizes the type of cross-continent ventures the president seeks. Backed by $7 billion in U.S. investment, the power program will focus on expanding access to electricity in six African countries: Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria and Tanzania.

Private companies - including General Electric and Symbion Power - will make an additional $9 billion in commitments. However, those contributions fall well short of the $300 billion the International Energy Agency says would be required to achieve universal electricity access in sub-Saharan Africa by 2030.

The funds are aimed at expanding the reach of power grids and developing geothermal, hydro, wind and solar power.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.wistv.com/story/22724387/first-family-touring-mandelas-island-prison

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Washington Post reveals new PRISM slides, offers greater clarity into the US' surveillance operation

Washington Post reveals new PRISM slides, offers greater clarity into the US surveillance operation

PRISM: The surveillance story that started with four leaked slides from the Washington Post, today gets a bit clearer. The publication has revealed four more annotated slides about the once-secret NSA operation, along with detailing the various levels of scrutiny from the FBI and NSA that happen before, during and after approved wiretaps take place. It seems that many of the measures make sure the warrantless data mining of US citizens occurs to the smallest extent possible and that FISA rules are followed -- still unsettling, nonetheless.

Detailing the process further, NSA analysts perform checks with supervisors to be certain intended targets are foreign nationals who aren't on US soil; approval is provided by way of "51-percent confidence" in assessments. During a "tasking process" search terms are entered, dubbed "selectors," which can tap into FBI gear installed within the private properties of participating companies -- so much for those denials. For live communications, this data goes straight to the NSA's PRINTAURA filtering system, while both the FBI and NSA scan pre-recorded data independently. Notably, live surveillance is indeed possible for the likes of text, voice and and instant message-based conversations, according to a slide that details how cases are notated. It's also worth mentioning that much of the collected metadata comes from programs outside of PRISM, as WP points out.

PRINTAURA is an overall filter for others, like NUCLEON for voice communications and MAINWAY for records of phone calls. Another two layers beyond that, called CONVEYANCE and FALLOUT, provide further filtering. Again, all of these checks apparently fine-tune results and help make sure they don't match up with US citizens. Results that return info about those in the US get scrapped, while those that have info about foreign targets mixed with US citizens get stored for up to five years. A total number of 117,675 active targets were listed as of April 5th, but the paper notes this doesn't reflect the amount of data that may also have been collected on American citizens. If you haven't already, now might be a great time to catch up on this whole PRISM fiasco to learn about how it might affect you. You'll find all the new slides and more detailed analysis at the source links.

Comments

Source: The Washington Post (1), (2)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/SK2-WcCpfe0/

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NYT: An unstoppable climb in CEO pay

ceos

17 hours ago

Lawrence J. Ellison of Oracle, top left, Marissa Mayer of Yahoo, Rupert Murdoch of News Corp, Leslie Moonves of CBS.

Clockwise from top left: Stephen Lam/Reuters; Mario Tama/Getty Images; Josh Reynolds/Associated Press; Lucas Jackson/Reuters / New York Times

Lawrence J. Ellison of Oracle, top left, Marissa Mayer of Yahoo, Rupert Murdoch of News Corp, Leslie Moonves of CBS.

When we made our annual foray into the executive pay gold mine in April, chief executives? earnings for 2012 showed what appeared to be muted growth on the year. The $14 million in median overall compensation received by the top 100 C.E.O.?s was just a 2.8 percent increase over 2011, the figures showed.

Well, what a difference a few months and a larger pool of C.E.O.?s make. According to an updated analysis, the top 200 chief executives at public companies with at least $1 billion in revenue actually got a big raise last year, over all. The research, conducted for Sunday Business by Equilar Inc., the executive compensation analysis firm, found that the median 2012 pay package came in at $15.1 million ? a leap of 16 percent from 2011.

So much for the idea that shareholders were finally getting through to corporate boards on the topic of reining in pay.

At least the stock market returns generated by these companies last year exceeded the pay increases awarded to their chiefs. Still, at 19 percent in 2012, that median return was only three percentage points higher than the pay raise.

In other words, it?s still good to be king.

Because the data shows only chief executives? pay, it does not reveal how good it still is to be a prince. Brian Foley, an independent compensation consultant in White Plains, pointed out that the 2012 compensation of the No. 2 executives at some of these companies would have vaulted them to the top ranks on the C.E.O. roster.

?The interesting thing is that there are people at these companies that make as much or more than other C.E.O.?s,? Mr. Foley said. ?I?m sure it?s a case of ?Look at what the C.E.O. has; I want more of that.? ?

Lawrence J. Ellison, founder and C.E.O. of Oracle, the software company, is a familiar face on the pay charts, and is ranked No. 1 this year. And had his two top lieutenants been included, they, too, would have landed among the top five on the list. Safra A. Catz, Oracle?s chief financial officer and co-president, and Mark V. Hurd, also a co-president, each received packages worth $52 million in 2012. (Mr. Hurd, you might remember, received severance of more than $12.2 million when he left Hewlett-Packard in 2010.)

As usual, cash pay for many of the managers pales next to the value of the stock and option grants they received. Median cash compensation was $5.3 million last year, while stock and option grants came in at $9 million.

Stock grants are clearly where the action is, and their value can really add up. Equilar?s analysis calculates the median value of stock holdings of these top C.E.O.?s at $51 million.

The trouble is, stock grants, which are supposed to create an incentive to improve a company?s performance, are also where pay excesses and disconnects arise, compensation consultants say. How these boards measure corporate performance can create pay problems by failing to align long-term incentives with shareholders? interests.

This is a significant lapse, given how hefty the incentive awards of stock or options can be. Performance shares generally comprise at least 50 percent of a typical chief executive?s long-term incentive award, consultants say.

The median of combined stock and option awards last year for the 200 C.E.O.?s on the list was 60 percent of pay. But individual cases can be far larger. Mr. Ellison received $90.7 million in options in 2012, or 94 percent of his nearly $96.2 million in total pay. Over all, Mr. Ellison?s compensation was up 24 percent from last year; his shareholders? returns, meanwhile, were negative 22 percent in the company?s fiscal year, which ended in May.

Mr. Ellison was hardly alone in receiving boatloads of stock in 2012. Among the five top C.E.O.?s receiving compensation packages that were at least double those of last year, stock and option awards ? which can vest over several years ? provided the major kick.

Those executives included Robert A. Kotick of Activision Blizzard, the software publishing company; James Q. Crowe of Level 3 Communications, the communications network company; and Mark G. Parker of Nike. Mr. Kotick received stock awards worth almost $56 million, or 86 percent of his total. Of Mr. Crowe?s $40.7 million in pay, stock and option grants amounted to $37 million, or 91 percent of the total. At Nike, Mr. Parker?s stock and option awards were 77 percent of his $35.2 million in compensation.

At least shareholders of Level 3 and Nike made money on their stocks in fiscal 2012 ? a gain of 36 percent at Level 3 and 30 percent at Nike. Activision?s holders weren?t so fortunate: their company?s shares lost 12 percent.

Cassandra Bujarski, an Activision spokeswoman, said Mr. Kotick?s equity award of $56 million was part of a new five-year employment contract he signed in March 2012, after two decades as chief executive. The award vests over five years, and half is performance-based, she said.

BOARDS typically assess an enterprise?s performance not only internally against what occurred in previous years, but also externally, against a peer group of companies.

Far too often, though, measures used by company boards to evaluate performance are focused on short-term results. They often miss a crucial element that determines long-term success: the ability to innovate.

?We need compensation that is aligned to long-term value drivers, like innovation,? said Mark Van Clieaf, a managing director at MVC Associates International, an organization consulting firm. ?Yet at probably 70 to 80 percent of companies, there are no metrics for measuring the impact of new products or services that were launched.?

Companies that don?t weigh innovation in deciding pay, he added, are essentially rewarding the status quo and failing to reward moves to keep a company strong in the long term, including farsighted efforts to invest in research.

There are several ways to gauge a company?s commitment to innovation. One is to look at research and development expenses as a share of revenue. Another is to look at return on invested capital, indicating how well a company uses its money to generate profits. This figure should always exceed the company?s percentage cost of capital.

Mr. Van Clieaf argues that boards should assess these factors when designing pay-for-performance packages. Otherwise, executives could be rewarded for destroying shareholder value.

Among the few companies to include an executive pay performance measure based on innovation is 3M, Mr. Van Clieaf said. Its ?New Product Vitality Index? measures the percentage of the company?s total sales from products introduced in the last five years. ?They recognize that to have sustainable growth and value, they must continue to be an innovation company,? he said.

In an analysis for Sunday Business, MVC Associates International compared financial statements and executive pay at three tech companies: Google, Qualcomm and Xerox.

Using data from Morningstar, Mr. Van Clieaf?s firm analyzed each company?s research and development costs, return on invested capital and stock performance over the last five years. He and his colleagues also calculated each company?s economic profit, which is after-tax income excluding acquisitions or divestitures that year, minus a charge for the capital used to generate that income. Then they compared these figures with the pay dispensed to the five executives at each company who were the highest paid over the period.

The differences were striking. Not surprisingly, spending on research and development over the last five years was high at both Google (averaging 13 percent of revenue) and Qualcomm (22 percent). Sizable returns on invested capital were a result at both companies: Google averaged 18 percent a year while Qualcomm averaged 16 percent.

At Xerox, it was another story. Research and development costs averaged 4 percent, while return on invested capital was 2.5 percent. Given that the typical cost of capital for a tech company is at least 8 percent, these figures would suggest that Xerox is earning less than its capital costs.

The economic profits at the three companies were also disparate. While all three generated net income over the last five years, a different picture emerged when MVC adjusted those earnings for the amount of all capital necessary to run the business.

While economic profits at Qualcomm and Google were around 70 percent of reported earnings over the period, economic profits at Xerox were negative.

Finally, MVC tallied the executive pay at these companies. Compensation for top executives was certainly larger at Google ($462 million) and Qualcomm ($280 million). But when judged as a percentage of the company?s economic profit over the five years, the pay amounted to 1.6 percent at Google and 2.3 percent at Qualcomm.

In Mr. Van Clieaf?s view, those two companies? executives earned their pay. In Xerox?s case, the company paid its top managers $165.7 million over five years, even though its economic profits amounted to a negative $1.65 billion.

?Corporate boards, pay advisers and proxy governance firms need to rethink how they assess what executives are doing,? he added. ?And it?s time for long-horizon investors to demand performance metrics and long-term inventive pay alignment.?

Karen Arena, a Xerox spokeswoman, declined to comment on Mr. Van Clieaf?s findings. But she said 96.4 percent of investor shares voted at the latest annual meeting were in favor of its executive compensation program.

Another problem with performance stock grants, pay consultants say, is that an award?s size is typically decided at the start of a year, well before shareholder returns for that or future years can be measured. Because most stock or option grants are expressed as a multiple of an executive?s salary, a falling share price during the year means that a larger amount of stock will be handed over when the award is made. In other words, the loss of value is compensated for with a gain in the amount of stock granted. For many shareholders, stuck with the reality of a declining share price, that may seem unfair.

To eliminate this problem, James F. Reda, an independent compensation consultant in New York whose firm is a unit of Gallagher Benefit Services, suggests that company boards allocate awards at or near to the end of the year so that total shareholder returns can be assessed more easily.

?Why just give stock away to senior executives and hope for future performance?? Mr. Reda asked in an interview. ?It?s better to adjust the pay based on performance the C.E.O.?s are actually delivering to shareholders. This is also a good way to put the brakes on C.E.O. pay.?

He has pitched this idea to various boards. ?A lot of directors say, ?That makes perfect sense; why don?t we take a look at it,?? he said.

In an article this year in the Journal of Compensation and Benefits, Mr. Reda and two colleagues studied pay at 334 large companies and found that more than two-thirds made stock grants in the first two months of their fiscal year. That leaves 10 months before shareholder returns can be analyzed.

Looking at shareholder return rankings of 173 companies in 2011, Mr. Reda found that the median change in a company?s ranking from February to December was 25 percentage points. By contrast, the median change in ranking from November to December at these companies was 7 percentage points.

In other words, companies making grants in the last month of a fiscal year can be much more confident about their shareholder return position than companies granting early in that year.

Some companies have already started shifting their stock award timing to the end of the year. Mr. Reda identified energy companies, such as Anadarko Petroleum, Exxon Mobil and Valero Energy, among those making late-year grant decisions. Others include Coca-Cola Enterprises, Federated Investors and Stanley Black & Decker, as well as St. Jude Medical, a medical devices company, and Ecolab, a maker of cleaning and maintenance products.

Obviously, the pace of change in corporate pay practices has been glacial, even as the growth in pay has exploded. Dysfunctional performance metrics are a root cause, experts say.

?How much of the pay is driven by right time, right place, and how much is driven by truly sustained, multiyear performance that?s still in place ?X? years out?? Mr. Foley said. ?What I would like to see is not just performance criteria that are robust and meaningful but also awards that are at risk for a meaningful period of time.?

Not in our lifetimes, but in our children?s, perhaps?

This story originally appeared in The New York Times with the headline, "An unstoppable climb in CEO pay."

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Copyright ? 2013 The New York Times

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Court wins expected to bolster gay pride events

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Cities across the nation were gearing up Sunday for what were expected to be especially well-attended and exuberant gay pride parades following the U.S. Supreme Court decisions restoring same-sex marriages to California and granting gay couples the federal benefits of marriage they were previously denied.

The gay pride celebrations scheduled in San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Seattle and St. Louis are annual, and in most cases decades-old events whose tones and themes have mirrored the gay rights movement's greatest victories and defeats. This year's parades, coming on the heels of the high court's historic decisions, should be no exception.

In San Francisco, the four plaintiffs in the case that led to the end of California's gay marriage ban will be riding in a contingent organized by the city attorney. Newlyweds Kris Perry and Sandy Stier of Berkeley, and Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo of Burbank, were able to marry Friday after a federal appeals court lifted a hold it had put on same-sex marriages while the couples' lawsuit challenging the ban worked its way toward and then through the Supreme Court. City officials decided to keep the clerk's office open throughout the weekend so couples who were in town for the celebration could get married.

On Saturday, defeated backers of the state's gay marriage ban made a last-ditch effort to halt the ceremonies. Lawyers for the Arizona-based Alliance Defending Freedom filed an emergency petition to the high court asking for a halt to the weddings on the grounds that the decision was not yet legally final. The filing came as dozens of couples filled City Hall in San Francisco to obtain marriage licenses.

The parade in New York City, where the first pride march was held 44 years ago to mark the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall Inn riots that kicked off the modern gay rights movement, also will become a sort of victory lap for Edith Windsor, the 84-year-old widow who challenged the federal Defense of Marriage Act after she was forced to pay $363,053 on the estate of her late wife. Windsor was picked as a grand marshal for the New York parade months ago, before the Supreme Court used her lawsuit to strike down the provision of the act that defined marriage as only between a man and a woman.

"We're very lucky, sometimes I like to think that when the decisions are made, they keep us in mind," joked NYC Pride media director Tish Flynn.

In an average year, an estimated 2 million people show up for what is one of the world's oldest and largest gay pride parades. But Flynn expects a surge in attendance like the one New York experienced two years ago, when the march was held days after Gov. Andrew Cuomo won legislative passage of a measure to legalize same-sex marriage in his state.

In Seattle, organizers of the city's annual Gay Pride parade were already planning on a larger gathering because Washington voters approved same-sex marriage last November. Voters upheld a law that the Legislature passed earlier in 2012. Since the measure took effect in December, more than 2,400 gay and lesbian couples have gotten married in the state.

Adam McRoberts, spokesman for Seattle Out & Proud, said it is expected that Sunday's parade will draw record crowds. Tens of thousands of people typically line the route through Seattle's Downtown and Belltown neighborhoods. McRoberts said the parade would have nearly 200 contingents participating.

In St. Petersburg, Fla., where Florida's largest gay pride event took place on Saturday, officials also made plans for a record turnout. It normally draws between 80,000-100,000 people, but Eric Skains, executive director of the St. Pete Pride Parade, said about 125,000 participants were expected, largely due to the Supreme Court ruling.

Although Florida is one of a few dozen states that does not recognize same-sex marriage, Skains said now is the time for the local LGBT community to work to change the laws locally and that the defeat of the Defense of Marriage Act "is an opportunity for us to be truly equal under the law."

This was the 11th year that parade was held in St. Petersburg. The mayor of Tampa, Bob Buckhorn, became the highest-ranking Florida official ever to participate when he walked the parade route on Saturday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/court-wins-expected-bolster-gay-pride-events-082807160.html

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How do you manage your debt? | Free Personal Finance Calculators

This is a guest post by Jaina Shah (Co ? Founder and Director ? Credexpert). Credexpert is a credit and debt counselling company and has a team of industry experts who handhold individuals through their credit life cycle.

Follow these simple 5 steps and you will always have no debt stress or find yourself in a debt trap.

?Step 1?Know what you OWE

To make sure that you don?t miss your payments and to maintain good credit history and a good credit score, figure out exactly how much do you owe, to whom and how much. Keep a record of all your loans and credit cards, including information such as:Wipe our Debt

Account / card number, lender/card provider, type of debt (housing loan, auto loan, credit card, etc.)? payment due, date due, interest rates, term, billing cycle and minimum payment due.

Keep these details (on your computer or in physical form) ? ensure you have a copy stored elsewhere and most importantly, keep it safe and protected. And most importantly, update this information as and when required.

This will also help you grade the debt you have taken and accordingly prioritise your ability to pay off your debts. It will also help you to determine your servicing capacity, specially for new loans you are planning to take. To prioritise your debt, you should rank them in the order of preference of:

  • Highest interest rate to the lowest interest rate
  • Type of loan (unsecured loans, credit cards and high interest bearing loans should be paid off first)

?To build a good credit score and to maintain a healthy credit history, pay back your debt on time?.

Please note that there are tax angles you should also consider whilst repaying your loans; for example, there are provisions in the Income Tax Act, for interest and principal repayments on housing loans and on education loans.

Step 2 ? Prepare a Family ?Budget and pay your debts

Meaning of Budget: Proper allocation and managing of funds and these funds should be bucketed in such a manner that they are used to pay your debts, maintain your lifestyle and can be used at the time of emergency (contingent funds).

The budget should stand up to a test in good and bad times. Also, reduce your debt burden by managing a proper allocation of funds in your budget.

Step 3?? ? Lower your BORROWING COST

Always pay back the higher interest loans first. .

There are various facilities available in the market which will help you to transfer from a higher interest rate loan to lower interest rate loan.

For.eg. in case of credit cards and housing loans.

For credit cards, making a minimum payment does reduce, to an extent, the repayment burden but has a? ballooning effect which will ultimately have a serious impact on your cash flows. Also, the interest rate on credit card outstanding is very high. Thus, at times making minimum payment is not bad but to avoid a cascading impact, you should repay all outstanding in the next cycle.

But there are no free lunches in life; you need to understand the implications of the switch and read whether there is any catch in the ?font 2 size? agreement which has all the hidden costs which may not be disclosed upfront to you.

Step 4? ? Set up an EMERGENCY FUND

As we read in Step 2 about how to manage your budget, you should have some reserve funds for emergencies. These emergency funds will come to your rescue at the time of a medical emergency, which unfortunately can be a major cost. Additionally, having a fund like this, will ensure you don?t have to pull out investments and other savings at such times.

Resist the temptation of dipping into this fund, either for day to day expenses or buying ?desirables?, keep the funds away and assume you don?t have them, and hopefully you will never need them!? As a figure, you should keep and plan for around 3-6 months of your monthly expenses as the amount in the fund.

The other name for emergency funds is ?Contingency funds?.

?Step 5. Live within your means

This is often hard to follow but the absolute truth always. You should spend money wisely ? within your capacity. The same applies for debt, borrow only what you absolutely need and what you can certainly service.

Banks will be prudent lenders; you have to be a prudent borrower.

Spend or expense in cash and if not in cash, ?than restrict yourself to use the Debit card but never a credit card, because the temptation of the using credit card starts from the day it come in your hand and if you do use ?a credit card then pay back the dues on time.

Don?t cut on your lifestyle, that?s tough, just be careful whilst upgrading your life style, do it in a manner that doesn?t dig a debt hole for you to fall into that cash trap.

By Jaina Shah (Co ? Founder and Director ? Credexpert)

Credexpert is a credit and debt counselling company and has a team of industry experts who handhold individuals through their credit life cycle. Credexpert has a vision is to counsel every individual on credit ? through its Newsletter, Blogs and Posts.

To know more, visit www.credexpert.co.in

13.060422 80.249583

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Source: http://freefincal.wordpress.com/2013/07/01/how-do-you-manage-your-debt/

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