Posts Tagged ‘interest’
June 30th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince


Expansion Difficulty/Complexity: Medium-Hard
This is a credit card add-on for the game of Monopoly wherein players have both cash and credit and may opt to “charge” certain expenses in lieu of paying cash in order to keep the cash flow for investing in property and buildings. For being such a careful money saver in real life, I was surprised at how quickly my “credit card debt” snowballed.
I started out by charging all my expenses because the 10% interest seemed so insignificant, and before I knew it, I was overlimit and paying 20% interest and my debt became more and more unmanageable. I came in second in the end with a credit card debt of $3,600. Madoline won with over $5,000 in cash, and Mabel lost with over $10,000 in credit card debt. :O
Objective
To teach children (and some adults) about buying and owing on the credit system.
Overview
This version of the game uses a credit system wherein players may opt to put purchases and expenses on their credit account instead of paying cash – either because they do not have enough cash available or because they wish to keep their cash to invest in property.
How to Play
- Print out and distribute a copy of the Bank of Monopoly Personal Credit Card Statement (includes rules) to each player. The statement contains 20 tables (representing 20 months/circuits of the game board). If you need more than 20 tables, simply print extra copies of this document.
Tip: Print 2-Sided to save paper
- Any time during the game, a player may opt to charge expenses such as rent, taxes and miscellaneous fees on his/her “credit card.” in order to save cash for investing in properties and building.
- Property and building purchases may not be charged on a credit card.
How to Use the Personal Credit Card Statement
- A player is allowed 12 credit transactions per month (circuit of the board).
- Each person has a credit limit of $2,000.
- On the first round of the game, enter $0 under Balance Forward.
- When making a charge, enter a brief description of the transaction under “Description of Transaction”
- Enter the amount under “Amount Charged”
- Total the current balance in the right-hand column under “Balance.”
- When you pass or land on “Go,” total your balance next to “Total Charges”
- Pay off your desired debt in cash to bank and enter the figure next to “Amount Paid @ “Go.”
- You are required to make a minimum payment of 10% of the total charges.
- If you are not able to make the 10% payment, your interest rate increases to 20% until you are able to make your minimum payment again.
- You may pay your balance in full and accrue no finance charges, or pay at least the minimum or as much as you are able to or wish to.
- Subtract the amount paid from the Total Charges and enter the amount next to “Balance Subtotal.”
If the balance is greater than $0, multiply Balance Subtotal by 10% (n x .1) if you’ve made at least the minimum payment, or 20% (n x .2) if you were not able to make the minimum payment, and enter the figure next to “x 10% Finance Charges.”
- Multiply Balance Subtotal by 10% (n x .1) and enter the figure next to “x 10% Finance Charges.”
- Add the 10% Finance Charge to your Balance Subtotal and enter the figure next to “Balance Forward.”
- This is your remaining debt.
- Move to the next empty table and enter the “Balance Forward” amount at the top right-hand column
- next to “Balance Forward.”
- When entering your first charge of new circuit around the board, add the charge to the forwarded amount and repeat.
Click on the image below to view a sample statement

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Tags: banking, cash, cash flow, Children, credit, credit card, credit card debt, credit card statement, credit cards, credit transactions, debt, debts, expansions, Finance, finances, game, Games, interest, money, monopoly, personal credit card, snowball effect
Posted in Banking, Credit Cards, Debt, Family, Finance, Frugality, Games, Hobbies, Money Management | No Comments »
June 25th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince and Madoline Hatter


Expansion Difficulty/Complexity: Medium-Easy
This Certificate of Deposit was the second expansion we created for the game (invented by Madoline) of Monopoly. After the Lottopoly (coming soon), I find this to be the most fun. The interest rates are rather high compared to real-life CD’s, but they help to illustrate the point that investing pays off, and it is so much fun watching the money add up.
Objective
To learn the system and benefits of saving and investing via Certificates of Deposit (CD’s).
How to Play
- Download and print the Bank of Monopoly Certificate of Deposit Form (includes rules).
- Banker
Designate a player to be in charge of CD’s. This person will receive and deposit into the bank the money to be invested, fill out the CD form, keep track of players’ passing of “Go,” calculate interests and penalties, and pay out the earnings from the bank.
- Opening a CD
Deposit the amount to be invested in the bank and fill in the player’s name, opening balance and term of deposit. The term is the number of “months” or circuits around the board. Deposits may only be made on the turn when a player passes or stops on “Go.” Once a deposit is made and the term is set, it may not be changed.
- Marking off the months
When a player passes “Go,” the banker marks off a circuit under 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Months. This indicates the passage of time. If a player purchases a CD for 1 month, his account is considered mature after one full circuit of the board. 2 months require 2 full circuits, and 3 months require 3 full circuits.
Note: Going to jail does not constitute a circuit as one does not pass “Go.”
- Payouts
When a player passes “Go” for the last time, his/her earnings are calculated and the balance paid out.
Click on the image below to see a sample

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Tags: banking, cash, certificate of deposit, certificates of deposit, Children, earning, education, expansions, Family, Finance, finances, financial education, game, Games, interest, interest rates, invest, investing, investment, kids, learning, money, money management, monopoly, monopoly game, personal finance, saving, saving money, savings
Posted in Banking, Family, Finance, Frugality, Games, Hobbies, Money Management, Monopoly, Savings | No Comments »
June 18th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince


Expansion difficulty/complexity level: Easy
This is a basic savings account add-on for the Monopoly game to teach the principles of personal savings. The rules are few, with easy to calculate interest rates and a simple form to keep track of each player’s individual savings. While the interest rates are higher (for easy calculation) than they would be in a real-life savings account, this game can teach children the basics and benefits of saving money and how banking and savings accounts work.
Objective: Learning Basic Money Saving Techniques and Principles
- Develop a regular habit setting money aside for a rainy day or future investment.
- Watch your money add up a few dollars at a time.
- Experience the satisfaction of greater earnings and faster growth as interest rates increase with your balance.
To play the Monopoly Personal Savings Account Expansion
- Download and print out the Monopoly Personal Savings Account Statement (with rules)*
- The Personal Savings Account Statement contains a form for tracking:
- Opening balance
- Interest Rate which increases as balances grow
- Interest Earned
- Credits and Debits (Deposits and Withdrawals)
- Closing Balance
Click on the image below to view a sample form

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Tags: banking, Children, earning, earnings, expansions, financial education, game, Games, interest, interest rate, interest rates, invest, investing, investment, kids, money, monopoly, monopoly game, personal savings account, saving, saving money, savings, savings accounts
Posted in Banking, Family, Finance, Games, Hobbies, Monopoly, Savings | 9 Comments »
May 24th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince
Note: We are taking a short break from blogging this week and will be re-posting a few of our earlier articles that may not have been read by many of our current readers. If you have already read this article (and those few to come), we apologize for the repetition and assure you that we will have some new material for you soon. Thanks for reading!
Pay Bills Online and Save
(Re-Post: Original post date February 15, 2008)
These days, most companies (including banks and utility companies) have websites and online payment options. Those that don’t often accept payments by phone. If you are still using snail mail to pay your bills each month, you could be saving $60 or more, depending your number of bills, each year by switching to payments by internet or phone. Consider the following example
Our monthly household bills look something like this: electric, gas, water & sanitation, 2 mortgages, cell phone, home insurance, auto insurance, 2 credit cards - an average of 10 bills per month.
The cost of a first-class postage stamp is $0.41 ($0.42 starting May 12, 2008), and the cost of a personal check for us is about $0.07. (Since the companies usually provide the envelopes, we won’t count the cost of an envelope.) So the cost of mailing one bill is $0.48. At 10 bills a month, that amounts to $4.80 a month, and a total savings of $57.60 each year. A larger household with children and more bills could save even more than this.
If the company doesn’t have a website, it usually has a toll-free number you can call to pay by phone. Some companies allow you to set up automatic monthly charges to your credit card or withdrawals from your bank account, which could save you a lot of time.
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Tags: banking, bills, credit cards, Finance, Frugality, Home, interest, money, savings
Posted in Bills, Credit Cards, Finance, Frugality | No Comments »
May 4th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince
The other day I posted a comment about how my sister and I share an AMEX Cash Back credit card on Kevin’s post $327 in AMEX Cash Back Thus Far at No Debt Plan and he emailed me to ask out of curiosity why I share an account with my sister because it sounds so risky. What if one of us decided to go on a shopping spree and screwed things up for the other person?
I emailed him back explaining our logic, and while it may be unconventional, for us it is a convention we have practiced with success for many years. Ever since our high school days when our parents would give each of us pocket money for lunch, the bus, pay phones, etc. we have always regarded our money as literally “our money.” When one of us didn’t have any cash and wanted to buy a drink or snack at school, we would just ask the other person for some. And to the shock of many of our friends, we would just give each other the money. We never had a distinction of “my money” and “your money”.
Perhaps this had to do with our always having been somewhat unconventional people, even as kids. While our friends went to the mall, movies or shopping, we preferred to go to the library, karate class, or stay at home and read or play with our pets (we had dogs, cats, 20-30 rabbits, guinea pigs, birds, fish, mice, etc.). So for us, money was never really a means for pleasure but living - taking the bus home from school, buying lunch or an occasional snack or buying pet supplies. Because we didn’t habitually spend money, our parents didn’t put us on allowances and would just give us money when we needed it. (This could explain why we still live on a No-Budget System.)
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Tags: banking, bills, cash, credit, credit cards, credit history, Finance, finances, Home, household, interest, life, money, saving, savings
Posted in Banking, Bills, Credit Cards, Finance, Frugality, Savings | 1 Comment »
February 27th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince
Do you have a daily indulgence that seems so trivial in cost that you see no harm in continuing to … well, indulge in it? Perhaps a Starbucks habit, eating lunch out, a pack of cigarettes, a candy bar, buying a daily newspaper from a newstand, etc.? Or not even a daily habit but a frequent one?
Consider this. Say you have a latte from Starbucks everyday, which only costs $3.00. But think about that $3.00 a day put into a savings account for x number of years, say until retirement. Ever wonder how much that $3.00 a day can be worth?
I used the Future Value Calculator below with the following figures: $0 initial investment, $90 monthly addition ($3 x 30 days), and the savings account interest rates from my current credit union savings account: .80% for balances under $999.99.
Firstly, keep these points in mind:
- This calculation is based on a regular credit union savings account interest rate and there are other high-interest savings accounts with higher APYs.
- There are savings accounts for which interest rates increase with the balance (but I only used the original .80% rate throughout because it would’ve taken me a really long time to figure it with changing rates and balances.)
- In this calculation, the interest is compounded monthly, but there are accounts that compound interest daily (such as my credit union).

So, in actuality the total savings and interest would be higher than below, but I think these figures would sufficiently illustrate my point. (more…)
Tags: banking, Finance, Frugality, interest, life, money, savings
Posted in Banking, Finance, Frugality, Savings | 2 Comments »