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Financial Literacy-Student Guide

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Financial Literacy
– Student Guide
Assignment Summary
Today’s guest speaker is a financial planner. He is here to clarify the purpose of creating a family budget,
and to reinforce the importance of saving for your future.
In this task, you will create a budget that includes calculating your income as well as managing your
overall expenses.
Assignment Instructions
Complete each task, reading the directions carefully as you go. Be sure to show all work where indicated,
including inserting images of graphs. Be sure that all graphs or screenshots include appropriate
information such as titles, labeled axes, etc. If your word processing program has an equation editor, you
can insert your equations. Otherwise, print this activity sheet and write your answers by hand.
Type all of your work into this document so you can submit it to your teacher for a grade. Show all your
work and answer each question as you complete the task, as this is what your grade is based on. Partial
credit will be given according to the completeness and accuracy of your explanations.
Your teacher will give you further directions as to how you are to submit your work. You may be asked to
upload the document, e-mail it to your teacher, or hand in a hard copy.
Now, let’s get started!
Step 1: Analyzing Components of a Budget
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Before a detailed family budget can be created, your financial planner has advised you to examine the
important aspects that affect a budget such as income, taxes, savings, and expenses. Work through the
following questions to start thinking about these aspects of budgeting.
a) As a student, you are able to earn extra money by assisting your neighbors with odd jobs.
If you charged $10.25 an hour for your assistance, about how many hours would you
need to work to earn $8,425? Show your work. (5 points)
8,425 ÷ 10.25 = 821.95122 or about 822 hours
b) Imagine that you earned $8,425 in one year. If the government enforces a 15% income
tax, how much money would you owe in taxes at the end of the year? Show your work. (5
points)
.15 · 8,425 = $1,263.75 in income tax
c) Your parents have been advised to save 5% of their income for your college education,
which would include money for housing, tuition, books, and fees. How much would your
parents have saved in one year, following the recommended 5%, if they had an average
household income of $48,948? Show your work. (5 points)
.5 · 48,948 = $24,474 saved
d) As a smart consumer, you are always on the lookout for sales, coupons, and rebates.
While shopping for new clothes, you notice that one particular brand of shirts is on sale for
20% off the original price. You also have a coupon for $10 off a $40 purchase. Coupons
are applied after the 20% discount is taken. If each shirt originally costs $17.99, how
many shirts would you need to buy to be able to use your coupon? Show your work. (15
points)
3 shirts:
17.99 · 3 = 53.97
.2 · 53.97 = 10.794
53.97 - 10.794 = 43.176 or $43.18 which means the least amount of shirts I need to buy is 3.
e) What would be the total cost of purchasing the number of shirts needed to use your
coupon—after your coupon is applied and a 7.5% sales tax is charged on the purchase?
(15 points)
35.6685 or $35.67
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Step 2: Calculating Monthly Expenses
The second step to building a family budget is to outline your expenses in greater detail, itemizing fixed
and variable expenses.
Suppose the table below shows your family’s monthly expenses by category.
Fixed or
Average
Variable
Monthly
Expense?
Cost
Fixed
$400
$4,800
Fixed
$950
$11,400
23.3%
Food
Variable
$650
$7,800
15.9%
Clothing
Variable
$75
$900
1.84%
Fixed
$500
$6,000
12.2%
Fixed
$1,200
Variable
$100
$1,200
2.45%
Emergency Fund
Fixed
$50
$600
1.22%
Savings for College
Fixed
$50
$600
1.22%
Fixed
$100
$1,200
2.45%
Total
$4,075
$48,900
100%
Expense
Income Tax
Housing
Transportation
Insurance & Medical
Entertainment
Savings for Retirement
Percent of
Yearly Cost
Yearly Budget
(Rounded)
$14,400
$4,800
= 9.8%
$48,900
29.4%
a) Fixed expenses are expenses that do not change from month to month, and variable
expenses are expenses that can fluctuate from month to month. Complete the second
column of the chart by determining if each expense is fixed or variable. (10 points – 2 points
each)
b) Choose an example of a fixed expense and an example of a variable expense, and explain
why they are classified that way. (4 points)
Housing is a fixed expense because the mortgage, rent, and or other possible housing bills are a set amount that
doesn’t change. Entertainment is a variable expense because the spending amount depends on what is purchased
because there are lots of things considered entertainment and the prices for these things are not fixed.
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c) Complete the remaining columns in the chart by calculating the missing values for each
category. Round your percentages to the nearest tenth of a percent. (16 points)
Step 3: Creating a Balanced Family Budget
a) Search for a "family budget estimator" and calculate the monthly expenses for a family living
in your city.
Insert a screenshot of the calculator you used, as well as all of the information you entered
into it. If you are unable to insert a screenshot, then list the information below. (10 points)
*see page 5*
I entered “Knox County Tennessee” and it calculated the monthly expenses
for that area. The budget provided is enough for a family of 2 adults and 2
children.
b) State the minimum monthly income and hourly wage per worker needed to cover monthly
expenses for the family you used in part a. Then, explain how to calculate the hourly wage
based on the monthly income and state the hourly wage. Assume that each full-time worker
works four 40-hour work weeks per month, and each part-time worker works two 40-hour
weeks per month. (10 points)
The minimum income is $6,264. If both adults work full-time then they each need to make an hourly wage
of $19.58. If they both work part-time jobs then they each need to make an hourly wage of $39.15. If one
adult works full-time and the other part-time then the full-time worker needs to make $19.58 and the parttime worker needs to make $39.15.
I calculated the wage by finding out how much each worker worked in a month (160 hours for full-time and
80 for part-time). Then I calculated how much they would need to make if both had full time jobs by
doubling the full-time hours and dividing 6,264 by that number (which yielded 19.58). Then I did the same
for the part-time hours (yielding 39.15). After doing this I had the minimum hourly wage for both job types.
c) Keeping all other criteria the same, add a child to the family you used in part a to determine
the monthly expenses. How does an additional child impact the family budget and hourly
wage? Which category was least affected by this change? Explain why you think there was
little impact to this category. (5 points)
I saw this after doing the previous questions including children so I will answer this with how it’s different with
just adults. Without children, the family budget and costs decreases greatly because there are less people to pay
for. The necessary hourly wage also decreases because there are less people to provide for. The category least
affected by this change is taxes. I think there was least change in this category because of child earn income
credit which allows for a return in money once a child is claimed on your taxes, meaning there would be little
increase on taxes for a family with children in comparison to a family without.
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Copyright © Edgenuity Inc.
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