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Post by Jolly on Apr 12, 2023 23:55:02 GMT
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Post by Ozarks Tom on Apr 13, 2023 1:52:38 GMT
In this house we don't consider it "emergency money", we call it potential bail.
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Post by Jolly on Apr 13, 2023 23:18:53 GMT
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Post by farmrbrown on Apr 13, 2023 23:29:56 GMT
I was gonna say, "10 grand? Emergencies around this place start when ya hit $1000!" LOL
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Post by wildhorseluvr on Apr 14, 2023 1:30:18 GMT
Just my opinion but even 10 or 20k set aside for an emergency fund will be gone in the blink of an eye the way things are heading. I’m wondering how many families who’ve stayed out of debt, always paid their bills on time and have an emergency fund will find themselves losing their homes due to inflation, higher taxes, etc. etc.
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Post by DEKE on Apr 14, 2023 14:26:05 GMT
Just my opinion but even 10 or 20k set aside for an emergency fund will be gone in the blink of an eye the way things are heading. I’m wondering how many families who’ve stayed out of debt, always paid their bills on time and have an emergency fund will find themselves losing their homes due to inflation, higher taxes, etc. etc. some states have put maximum tax increases into their system. So if you "homestead" property in Florida, meaning there is a home on the property that you live in, the max tax increase you will see is 3%. But when the property is sold, the taxes will revert to the then fair market assessed value and tax rate
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