It may have taken a brutal twenty-two months of a global pandemic to do it, but when it comes to personal finances, there is one silver lining: 84 percent of Americans say that they have learned to stop worrying about what they can’t control.
Read MoreOne of the coolest parts of my job is interviewing authors of books that pique my interest, and then compiling my favorites into a best of list! Given the chaos of 2020, I skipped the ritual last year, but happily, I present Books of the Year, Jill on Money style.
Read MoreThe government reported that 210,000 jobs were created in November, below expectations for 550,000.
Read MoreDespite supply shortages, Americans are set to pick up their spending this holiday season.
Read MoreIn honor of the start of the holiday season, I am embracing my inner Grinch. Not the early, stingy Grinch, but the one whose heart grew three times after understanding the true meaning of the season.
Read MoreGiven a renewed focus on the fragility of our health and the surge in job leavers and changers currently, this would seem to be an especially important Open Enrollment benefit season.
Read MoreThe labor market bounced back in October with the economy adding 531,000 new positions, the upper end of the range of estimates, and revisions to the two previous months added an additional 235,000 than previously reported.
Read MoreIt’s Medicare open enrollment season, which means that more than 60 million Americans over the age of 65 have within their grasp a fat, softcover book, Medicare & You handbook, that is likely destined for the recycling bin.
Read MoreJust in time for Halloween, two reports spooked economists. Does this mean that the U.S. economy looks like zombies from The Walking Dead?
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