Better Spending Income & Wealth Workers, Retirees, and the Consumer Price Index So far this century, life is treating retirees about as well as those who still By Scott Burns / December 18, 2005
Better Spending Income & Wealth Retirement How to Turn Lead into Gold A recent column (Going for the Gold with 401(k) Plans, Tuesday, October 18) categorized 401(k) By Scott Burns / November 8, 2005
Income & Wealth Retirement The Future of Old “Don’t get old. There’s no future in it.” That’s what my stepfather, who died four By Scott Burns / November 6, 2005
At Large Income & Wealth The Plight of the Affluent So, you think things are tough for middle income workers and the poor? Well, open By Scott Burns / October 30, 2005
Better Spending Income & Wealth Insurance Taking Missed Fortune to the Reality Lab The premise of “Missed Fortune 101”, a popular insurance book, is that all of us By Scott Burns / September 6, 2005
Better Spending Home Ownership Income & Wealth Some Fortunes are Lost. Others are missed. It’s a tough story. Newlyweds in their early 20s buy their first home with no By Scott Burns / September 4, 2005
At Large Consumption Smoothing Income & Wealth Why Young Families Are Always Broke In case you haven’t figured it out, the reason you always feel broke is that By Scott Burns / August 21, 2005
Better Spending Consumption Smoothing Retirement Consumption: It’s Just So 1950 Some people can’t bear good news. Many readers responded with disbelief to my recent column By Scott Burns / August 14, 2005
Better Spending Consumption Smoothing Couch Potato Investing Retirement In the Future, You’ll Need Less Money, the Sequel Has your financial planner told you to save more? He may be dead wrong. He By Scott Burns / July 17, 2005
Better Spending Couch Potato Investing Insurance Answering the Variable Annuity Industry “Your June 21 article, ‘7 sins of variable annuities,’ provides a biased, inaccurate and incomplete By Scott Burns / July 12, 2005
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Insurance Seven Reasons to Avoid Variable Annuities The kids are gone. The last tuition bill has been paid. The mortgage is nearly By Scott Burns / June 21, 2005