Error message

Updates from Organizations - Government agencies - Advertise Various Artists

Monday, February 11, 2019 - 10:45am
Not necessarily Views by this paper/ news outlet

With health care costs rising and U.S. life expectancy declining for the third year in a row, the personal-finance website WalletHub today released its report on 2019’s Healthiest & Unhealthiest Cities in America as well as accompanying videos.

To identify the places where health is a priority, WalletHub compared more than 170 of the largest U.S. cities across 42 key metrics. The data set ranges from cost of medical visit to fruit and vegetable consumption to fitness clubs per capita.
 

Healthiest Cities

 

Least Healthy Cities

1

San Francisco, CA

 

165

Montgomery, AL

2

Seattle, WA

 

166

Detroit, MI

3

San Diego, CA

 

167

Memphis, TN

4

Portland, OR

 

168

Augusta, GA

5

Washington, DC

 

169

Fort Smith, AR

6

New York, NY

 

170

Huntington, WV

7

Denver, CO

 

171

Shreveport, LA

8

Honolulu, HI

 

172

Gulfport, MS

9

Scottsdale, AZ

 

173

Laredo, TX

10

Irvine, CA

 

174

Brownsville, TX

 
Key Stats

  • Overland Park, Kansas, has the lowest share of physically unhealthy adults, 7.10 percent, which is 2.7 times lower than in Detroit, the city with the highest at 19.10 percent.
     
  • Laredo, Texas, has the lowest cost per doctor’s visit, $58.33, which is 3.3 times less expensive than in Boston, the city with the highest at $190.52.
     
  • Portland, Maine, has the lowest share of adults eating fruit less than once daily, 28.20 percent, which is 1.8 times lower than in Gulfport, Mississippi, the city with the highest at 51.80 percent.
     
  • Amarillo, Texas, has the lowest average monthly cost for a fitness-club membership, $13.67, which is 6.2 times less expensive than in San Francisco, the city with the highest at $84.36.
     

To view the full report and your city’s rank, please visit: 
https://wallethub.com/edu/healthiest-cities/31072/  

===============================

Should You Borrow From Your 401(k)? Here Are Some Of The Pros and Cons

 

It’s nice to have a 401(k), but how helpful or damaging is it to dip into your retirement savings to cover an unexpected expense, to pay down a deluge of debt, or to make a major purchase?

 

Some people borrow from their 401(k) for those reasons and others, such as helping a family member, paying for large medical expenses, funding a business startup or going on vacation. There are pros and cons, and those considering the option need to balance long-term impacts with their immediate needs for tapping into what should be a long-term retirement savings account.

 

“Most financial experts caution against borrowing from your 401(k),” says Charisse Mackenzie (www.saturnwealth.com), a financial advisor. “But they also concede that a loan may be a more appropriate alternative to an outright distribution, if the funds are absolutely needed.”

 

Mackenzie lists a few advantages and disadvantages of borrowing from a 401(k):

PROS

  • No credit check. If a person has trouble getting credit, borrowing from a 401(k) becomes an option because it requires no credit check. “As long as your company and its participating plan permits loans, you should be able to borrow,” Mackenzie says.

  • It’s more convenient. Usually less paperwork is required when borrowing from your 401(k) and you receive the money quicker than with a traditional loan.

  • Better interest rate. “While the rate you pay depends upon the terms your 401 (k) plan sets out, the rate is typically lower than the rate you will pay on personal loans or through a credit card,” Mackenzie says. “Plus, the interest you pay will be to yourself rather than to a finance company.”

CONS

  • Opportunity cost. “One of the main drawbacks is the money you borrow will not benefit from the potentially higher returns of your 401(k) investments,” Mackenzie says. “Additionally, many people who take loans also stop contributing. This means the further loss of potential earnings and any matching contributions.”

  • Potential penalties and tax consequences. A 401(k) loan not paid is deemed a distribution, subject to income taxes and a 10 percent penalty tax if you are under the age of 59 ½. “Should you switch jobs or get laid off, your 401(k) loan is required to be paid by the due date of your federal income tax return,” Mackenzie says. “If you do not have the cash to pay the balance, it will have tax consequences.”

  • Less take-home pay. Most retirement plan loans are repaid as payroll deductions. “If you’re suffering financially and living paycheck-to-paycheck, a loan from your 401(k) doesn’t help you,” Mackenzie says. “If you’re squeezed further to pay monthly bills, a loan in fact could make your situation worse.”

  • A red flag alert. “Borrowing from retirement savings to fund current expenditures could be a warning sign of overspending,” Mackenzie says. “You may save money by paying off your high-interest credit card balances, but if these balances get run up again, you will have done yourself more harm.”

“Much of the decision on whether to borrow from a 401(k) depends on the degree of financial difficulty people find themselves in,” Makenzie says. “They should always try to consider better alternatives first, because retirement savings are so vital.”

 

About Charisse Mackenzie

Charisse Mackenzie is president of Saturn Wealth (www.saturnwealth.com). She spent time in the healthcare industry, developing budgets and running statewide programs until joining a Scottsdale-based financial firm in 2009. In 2015, she earned the Accredited Investment Fiduciary® designation from the Center for Fiduciary Studies, which certifies that she has specialized knowledge of fiduciary standards of care and their application to the investment management process. Mackenzie graduated from Arizona State University in 2003, with a focus on business, psychology and finance.

 =========================

 

Stephen Colbert: We're Finally Going to Get Trump's Tax Returns

Medicaid Expansion Repealed! The Legislature Stabbed Voters and Set Up a Bizarre Blah, Blah ‘Utah’ Plan That Means FEWER Utah Low-Income Families Will Be Covered With MORE Cost to the State. Medicaid Expansion doing well in New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Nevada and (soon) Idaho. Here is what Montana’s Governor says about Expansion.

A Democratic Congressman is unraveling and reversing much of the ugly, anti-conservation havoc that Cong. Rob Bishop leaves behind after four years as Chair of the House Committee on Natural Resources.

UP--Utah Progressives gives you and thousands of other reasonable Utah people a regular update about the real state of political affairs in Utah – with this newsletter, on the radio, social media, TV and now podcasts. We are telling YOUR story. Do You Have Our Back? $20 would help a lot!

Complete Nerds View: Frequently Asked Questions About Wintertime PM2.5 Pollution in the Salt Lake Valley

Bill Maher: Jeff Bezos and The State of Our Union. WARNING-Ribald  

Samantha Bee: The State of the Union is...Long

Who in the Utah Legislature Dares to Introduce the 2019 Session ERA? Nobody?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are three versions of the Dabakis Report: Weekly Political Digest, Conservation