Tag Archives: income
If You Like the Idea of Collecting Income from Gold and Silver Stocks, Read On
In short, many of the world’s best miners and royalty companies (like Silver Wheaton), could soon pay larger dividends…
Daily Trade Alert
First quarter 2012 retirement income scorecard: Managed payouts
How much retirement income can your retirement savings generate?
A Top 5 Income Stock for 2012
A 5.0% yield, monopoly control in its market, and more than 35 dividend increases make this stock one of our favorites for 2012.
Recent Articles on GlobalDividends.com
These Three Stocks Are “Lifetime Income Generators”
These are the income stocks you can buy and then forget about — while earning increasing dividends.
Recent Articles on GlobalDividends.com
Passive Income Success with EFT: Using Emotional Freedom Techniques to cultivate financial, creative and lifestyle freedom
Passive Income Success with EFT: Using Emotional Freedom Techniques to cultivate financial, creative and lifestyle freedom
How would you like to enjoy a relaxed, rewarding lifestyle with lots of free time while fulfilling the callings of your highest self? You can — through Passive Income, generated by products you believe in and are passionate about! The Passive Income lifestyle is an inspiring ideal rooted in creating residual income through ideas, products and projects that may require significant start-up work, but once completed, could continue to generate income for the rest of your life! The Internet has
My Most Important Income Investing Advice for 2012
Following this strategy netted more than $ 25,000 in dividends during the past two years. That why it’s my most important advice for any income investor.
Recent Articles on GlobalDividends.com
These Stocks Provide Safety, Growth Potential, and Stable Income
Hold them for at least the next year or two…
Daily Trade Alert
The Press and Government Now Consider a Family Earning $45,000 To Be Low Income
If any of you saw your local newspaper or favorite national news outlet this morning, you might have come across an article by Hope Yen of the Associated Press called Census Shows 1 in 2 People Are Poor or Low-Income. In it, the reader is subjected to what are meant to be frightening facts and figures about the state of poverty in the United States; how we have some how devolved back into post-Industrial Revolution England as street urchins out of a Charles Dickens novel grovel in the streets next to super-rich textile barons wearing diamond-encrusted cufflinks.
The article explains that low-income is typically defined as those earning between 100% and 199% of the poverty level. With a little bit of research, it isn’t hard to discover that in 2011, the poverty level for a married couple with two kids was $ 22,350, meaning that this typical household would be considered low-income if it was earning $ 45,000 per year. To put that into perspective, such a family would be in the top 1.72% of income in the world. It would be richer than 983 out of every 1,000 households on the planet. That is how we are defining low-income now.
Only in the United States can you rank in the top 1.72% of global income, enjoy heating, air conditioning, two cars, cell phones, video game systems, and high definition televisions and be considered low-income. Only in the United States can a member of the press, in sincerity, publish an article that essentially states the median family with a near median income in one of the richest nations in the history of the world is low-income. The sense of historical, and global, perspective is entirely lacking for two reasons: Envy and Ignorance.
When most reasonable people hear about low-income or poverty households, they think of struggling senior citizens who can’t afford heat in the winter or a single mom with three kids holding down two jobs just to keep her family from going hungry. That is poverty. That is the sort of thing we need to protect against as a society. That is why we need to create upward ladders of social mobility and downward safety nets of social protection such as food banks, shelters, and work training programs.

