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Financial regulation: Top watchdog

Should the Fed take up the cudgel as America’s regulator-in-chief?

BARACK OBAMA’S government is using the firestorm over American International Group to press a priority of its own: new authority to take over any big, troubled financial institution and a watchdog to look for risk in the entire financial system. But the controversy has also created a new obstacle for those plans. The most logical agency to fill those roles had been the Federal Reserve, but political support for that idea may have been hurt by its role in the bail-out of AIG.

That is the view of Barney Frank, the powerful chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, who suggested in an interview on Thursday March 19th that “The Fed has taken a bit of a hit over this AIG issue.” He argues that the “political case for the Fed as systemic risk regulator is going to have be rebuilt, re-examined. It has not changed my personal view of the Fed as the best possible [candidate] but it has substantially weakened their political position.” ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

The Madoff affair: Going down quietly

Bernard Madoff, history's biggest swindler, faces life behind bars

SURELY a drama this dark deserved a more explosive finale. A previous wave of financial fraud produced many an entertaining courtroom battle, featuring the likes of Enron’s Jeffrey Skilling and Tyco’s Dennis Kozlowski. But Bernard Madoff has robbed the world of such a catharsis, just as he robbed almost 5,000 credulous clients of billions of dollars. On Thursday March 12th he pleaded guilty in a Manhattan court to 11 charges, ranging from securities and mail fraud to money laundering and perjury. Together they carry a maximum jail term of 150 years, leaving the 70-year-old “Monster Mensch” all but certain to spend the rest of his life behind bars.

The fraud he masterminded was remarkable for its scale, longevity and the sophistication of its victims: hedge-fund founders, Swiss banks and movie moguls, as well as charities and small investors, some of whom put in their life savings. The charge sheet confirms that he ran a Ponzi scheme of unprecedented boldness, dating at least as far back as the 1980s. Mr Madoff claimed to achieve healthy, stable returns through a whizzy stock- and options-trading strategy. In reality, there was no trading for well over a decade. Money from new investors was used to cover redemptions for old ones. It was that simple and brazen. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Conservative America: Right and wrong

Barack Obama is dispensing rapidly with his predecessor’s more conservative policies

IF ONE policy sealed the tie between George Bush's administration and conservative religious voters it was his ban on federal funding for human embryonic stem-cell research. On Monday March 9th Barack Obama overturned the controversial policy by signing an order lifting the ban on federal funding introduced in August 2001. The first veto of Mr Bush’s presidency, in July 2006, was used to reject a bill from a Republican-controlled Congress that would have loosened the restrictions. At that time Mr Bush said that harvesting embryonic stem cells crossed a moral boundary that “would support the taking of innocent human life in the hope of finding medical benefits for others”.

Scientists and a few Republicans (Nancy Reagan among them) fought vigorously against the federal-funding ban. The scientists argued that America would lose the edge in biomedical research to Europe; Mrs Reagan compassionately pleaded that stem-cell research could help to find a cure for Alzheimer's disease, which afflicted Ronald Reagan in his later years. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

World economy: What went wrong

The IMF blames inadequate regulation, rather than global imbalances, for the financial crisis

IN RECENT months many economists and policymakers, including such unlikely bedfellows as Paul Krugman, an economist and New York Times columnist, and Hank Paulson, a former American treasury secretary, have put “global imbalances”—the huge current-account surpluses run by countries like China, alongside America’s huge deficit—at the root of the financial crisis. But the IMF disagrees. It argues, in new papers released on Friday March 6th, that the “main culprit” was deficient regulation of the financial system, together with a failure of market discipline. Olivier Blanchard, the IMF's chief economist, said this week that global imbalances contributed only “indirectly” to the crisis. This may sound like buck-passing by the world’s main international macroeconomic organisation. But the distinction has important consequences for whether macroeconomic policy or more regulation of financial markets will provide the solutions to the mess.

In broad strokes, the global imbalances view of the crisis argues that a glut of money from countries with high savings rates, such as China and the oil-producing states, came flooding into America. This kept interest rates low and fuelled the credit boom and the related boom in the prices of assets, such as houses and equity, whose collapse precipitated the financial crisis. A workable long-term fix for the problems of the world economy would, therefore, involve figuring out what to do about these imbalances. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Jobless hit with bank fees on benefits

For hundreds of thousands of workers losing their jobs during the recession, there’s a new twist to their financial pain: Even as they’re collecting unemployment benefits, they’re paying bank fees just to get access to their money.Thirty states have struck such deals with banks that include Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase and [...]

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[Source: vote tags: Tracking the Vote - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Obama and Brown to meet in March

The White House has confirmed Prime Minister Gordon Brown will be visiting US president Barak Obama on 3 March.It will be the first time the two have met face-to-face since Mr Obama was elected last year.A White House statement said the US and UK had a “special partnership” and the president wanted to work closely [...]

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[Source: vote tags: Tracking the Vote - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Financial fraud: Howzat!

Allegations against Stanford Group, among others, suggest this will be a fraud-infested downturn

HOUSTON has not seen anything like it since the collapse of Enron. On Tuesday February 17th federal agents swooped on Sir Allen Stanford’s financial group, seizing mountains of documents, and a judge placed it in the hands of a receiver. The obvious parallel, however, was not the defunct energy firm but Bernard Madoff. Charges filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) portray the flamboyant Sir Allen as the ponzi-master’s offshore equivalent, perpetrating a fraud of “shocking magnitude” based on “false promises” and fabricated performance data, primarily through his Antigua-based bank.

The central allegation is that Stanford International Bank hoodwinked investors over the safety and liquidity of uninsured certificates of deposit (CDs). It took in some $8 billion, consistently offering rates well above those of big banks—sometimes more than twice as high. Despite assurances that the money was going into liquid securities, much of it was apparently ploughed into sticky assets such as property and private equity. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

U.S. job losses accelerate

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. employers slashed 598,000 jobs in January, the biggest monthly loss in 34 years, and the jobless rate soared to a 16-year peak, putting pressure on lawmakers to act quickly to counter a deepening recession.

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[Source: vote tags: Tracking the Vote - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Stimulus Open Thread

Ben Nelson has saved us all!

"We trimmed the fat, fried the bacon and milked the sacred cows," Nelson said as debate began.

According to several senators, the revised version of the plan axed money for school construction and nearly $90 million for fighting pandemic flu, among other things.

Thank God that someone worth $10 million was able to cut "sacred cows" like school construction and flu prevention! Whatever would we do without such guardians of the public interest! More:

In the end, there were $96 billion of cuts - whittling the Senate bill to $780 billion - with about $50 billion of the cuts coming from the Collins-Nelson proposal. Most of the cuts came in school construction, teacher funding and higher education.A $15,000 tax credit for new home purchases, which was proposed by Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), remains in the measure.

All the final details have not yet been released, but Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said in an evening floor speech that Democrats "had to swallow real hard" to accept many of the cuts.

We don't need no education!

There is a very cute stereotype that bloggers (all one hundred million of us) are rich white kids from the suburbs. However, the truth is that of the four people in my "family unit" (me, Natasha, my brother and my sister-in-law who live n the apartment above me) two of us have lost our jobs in the last three months. Both of the jobs lost were in education related fields--so, yey that there is now virtually no education funding is in the stimulus! Work is spotty, and health insurance is spottier. Unless the COBRA benefits for the unemployed are reinstated in the conference report, we will have multiple people in our family unit without health insurance, too.

I've heard that you are supposed to get more conservative when you get older. The older I get, the more I am convinced that "moderates" like Susan Collins and Ben Nelson--so beloved by the media--are simply rich corporate hacks who seek to destroy the American middle class by subtler means than the likes of Bush.

This is a bill that literally hits home. I have nothing but antipathy for the fudruckers who sought these cuts. When we kick their ass on the electoral field in two, four of six years, the media will undoubtedly call us ideological extremists taking out our psychological frustrations on decent moderates who keep American civility afloat. The good thing is that the voters who get rid of them will know the real reason. People like Susan Collins and Ben Nelosn are destroying lives. At the very least, they deserve to be out of a job as a result.

Let's fix this in the conference. This is an open thread on the stimulus.


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[Source: RETROGRESSING - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Passing Bankruptcy Reform In The Stimulus

Earlier today, David discussed an attempt in Congress to "include a provision to allow judicial modification of mortgages on primary residences," as part of the stimulus package. His post included a "Dear Colleague" letter to members of the U.S. House on the matter. This legislation is key because it would serve as a partial reversal of the 2005 Bankruptcy Act, which remains one of the most odious pieces of legislation passed during the Bush era. Now, I can provide you with some more details on this development.

The current legislation is H.R. 225, the Emergency HOME Protection Act, introduced by Brad Miller. You can read the text of the legislation here.  Its corresponding Senate bill is S 61, introduced by Senator Durbin. Importantly, back in October when he was whipping votes to pass the bailout, then candidate Obama promised to help pass legislation of this nature in order to secure more progressive votes. For example, consider the statement Donna Edwards made on her "yes" vote for the bailout (emphasis mine):

"After speaking with Senator Barack Obama yesterday and with many of our retirees, workers, homeowners and small business owners, I am convinced today that even left with this imperfect product, the choice is this or nothing. For me, doing nothing was never an option. I appreciate the personal commitment that Senator Obama made to me that we will work to provide direct relief to homeowners facing foreclosure by enabling home mortgages to be dealt with in the context of personal bankruptcy and looking at a program such as one that existed in the 1930's to 1950's to work directly with homeowners to mitigate foreclosure.

The bill might already be in the stimulus. Here is a statement from Miller's office that I just received:

We are optimistic that 225 is in stimulus package- we have heard Obama has included, but haven't seen it.

The Citigroup endorsement of the language in the bill is a big boost, optimistic that other major financial institutions will endorse as well.

In the short term, I will now attempt o verify if 225 has already been included in the stimulus. If so, it makes the stimulus significantly more attractive.

If H.R .225 has not already been included in the stimulus, I will look into the strategy to make sure it is included. Once I have it, I think we should develop a strategy to start applying pressure for it. This is a piece of legislation that can make a positive difference in the lives of hundreds of thousands, even millions, of Americans over the next two years. As such, along with the proposed commission to investigate Bush era crimes by John Conyers, this bill makes for a perfect addition to the first edition of the legislative monitoring project we have been discussing on Open Left.

If, like me, you are tired of just opposing legislation in Congress, and you would like to start acting on behalf of good, progressive legislation, then this should be an excellent first opening. It is possible that we won't need to do anything, as it might already be included in the stimulus package, but it strikes me as a nice opening. I am interested to hear your thoughts on the matter.


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[Source: RETROGRESSING - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Britain's economy: Combating the recession

The Bank of England cuts interest rates to 1.5%, an all-time low

THE decision made history. On Thursday January 8th the Bank of England cut the base rate from 2% to 1.5%, the lowest since the central bank was founded in 1694. The Bank of England’s mission then was to provide war finance. Its task now is to fight a recession that looks increasingly likely to be the worst since the second world war.

The bank’s latest move means that the base rate has now fallen by an extraordinary 3.5 percentage points since the start of October (see chart). It followed a clutch of closely watched business surveys of purchasing managers that painted a dismal picture of the economy in December. Manufacturing was mired in the deepest downturn since the survey started in 1992. Construction activity plumbed new depths. And activity in private services stayed close to its record low in November. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

10 Smart Books of 2008: Our Staff Picks

Amid the warp-speed rush of information these days, there’s nothing like a relaxing read to distract from the gloomy headlines — or at least put them into perspective. To help you unwind over the holidays or fill your last-minute gift list, we asked our editors and writers for their favorite books of 2008. Some selections, like the popular “Discover Your Inner Economist,” speak directly to investing and personal finance. But we’ve also rounded out the list with choices that are useful in other ways — or just plain make for good reading.

We’d like to hear about your favorites from 2008, too. Please tell us what you enjoyed reading this year by writing in the comments section below.

Here are our staff picks for 2008:

Finance and Investing

Panic! The Story of Modern Financial Insanity

Editor: Michael Lewis

Picked by: Diana Ransom / Reporter, SmartMoney.com

If you haven’t quite understood the latest financial crisis that’s been confounding investors for the past 16 months -- and we don’t blame you -- then get this book. Michael Lewis, author of the 1989 memoir “Liar’s Poker,” which self-deprecatingly chronicled his unlikely rise and fall as a bond trader at the height of the 1980s frenzy on Wall Street, compiles about 50 stories of modern financial upheaval. The collection starts with an account -- co-authored by SmartMoney’s Executive Editor, Bob Rose -- of the 1987 Black Monday stock market crash and moves along to the roots of the subprime mortgage crisis. While “Panic” provides little insight on how to get out of this current financial fiasco, readers will surely walk away with a better understanding of Wall Street’s rational irrationality and how it affects investors.

Finance and Investing

Discover Your Inner Economist

Author: Tyler Cowen

Picked by: Kelli B. Grant / Senior Consumer Reporter, SmartMoney.com

Basic economic principles will help you do more than navigate the stock market. Tyler Cowen, a professor of economics at George Mason University, teaches readers to recognize the incentives (financial and otherwise) underlying everyday situations, from a first date to a crucial work meeting, and how to work the particular carrots and sticks to your advantage. Once you understand that appealing to your teenager’s sense of familial obligation to help around the house is a more effective approach than upping his allowance, you’ll have cleaner dishes and a fatter wallet. Now that’s getting the most for your money.

Finance and Investing

The Truth About Avoiding Scams

Author: Steve Weisman

Picked by: Neil Parmar / Staff Writer, SmartMoney magazine

As the latest allegations about Bernard Madoff and his Ponzi Scheme hedge fund remind us, no matter what the state of the economy, get-rich schemers and scam artists will prey on consumers who don’t know how to keep themselves from becoming victims. Fortunately, Weisman’s reporting reveals some of the most common conmen’s gambits and suggestions to avoid them. The book helps readers of all ages, from college students considering getting a new credit card to retirees worried about medical identity theft. Each of the 12 sections are sprinkled with tips for readers who might want to jot down a few points, then pass the book onto a friend. (I’d give you mine, but I’ve already taken a highlighter to it.)

Finance and Investing

The Art of the Trade: What I Learned Trading the Chicago Futures Markets

Author: Jason Alan Jankovsky

Picked by: Jonathan Hoenig, SmartMoney.com columnist and managing member at Capitalistpig Hedge Fund LLC

In the investment game, you don’t battle the market as much as your own psychology. And nestled in between the “7 Steps to Financial Success” and guides to “Sure-Fire Trading” comes this thoughtful and brutally-honest read chronicling the invaluable experience gained in the world’s most competitive marketplace. As a former Chicago floor trader myself, I was impressed with his ability to nail the emotional rollercoaster unique to the futures game. Most people lose money in the markets because they treat them as a game. Jankovsky’s book is one of the few that moves beyond investment tips and equips readers with the psychological foundation necessary to survive most market environments…even one like 2008.

In the Office

Beyond Bullsh*t: Straight-Talk at Work

Author: Samuel Culbert

Picked by: Matt Heimer / Deputy Editor, SmartMoney magazine

Bullsh*tting, as the philosopher Harry Frankfurt recently pointed out, isn’t the same thing as lying. Unlike a liar, who knows the truth but says its opposite, a bullsh*tter merely says whatever’s expedient, whether true or false, to suit his purpose in the moment. That’s why bullsh*t is so prevalent in the workplace, where appeasing your boss or rebuffing a persistent colleague often takes precedence over telling the truth. In this short, slightly self-helpish but admirably clear book, Culbert, a UCLA management professor, succinctly diagnoses why bullsh*tting can become such a drag on the effectiveness of a business, a relationship and even a society. And, as we watch Wall Street executives tie themselves in knots trying to explain why record losses should be rewarded with “retention payments,” it feels particularly relevant right now.

In the Office

Working: People Talk About What They Do All Day

Author: Studs Terkel

Picked by: Matt Heimer / Deputy Editor, SmartMoney magazine

As America struggles to extricate itself from a costly, unpopular war, the political classes fret over environmental catastrophe and dependence on foreign oil. Meanwhile, the economy is going into the tank, thanks to the woes of the manufacturing sector and a brutal downturn in the stock market. Last Thursday? No, 1974, when Studs Terkel’s oral-history compilation "Working" was originally published. Terkel interviewed hundreds of people about their work – tape recording tennis pros and CEOs, bartenders and housewives – then stitched their transcribed remarks into an account of the joys and absurdities of making a living in an uncertain world. Sure, some elements feel dated: cheap shots at Nixon, obsolete professions like elevator operator and the paucity of women in major professional roles. But the economic anxieties of an earlier generation remain timely, which is why we’ve grandfathered in this doorstop classic on our 2008 list.

In the Oval Office

Dreams From My Father

Author: Barack Obama

Picked by: Brad Reagan / Staff writer, SmartMoney magazine

Before the election, there was understandable curiosity among readers about where the charismatic junior senator from Illinois actually came from. And this book, first published in 2004, retains real relevance as a rare unvarnished look into the formative years of a national political figure. Now that he’s charged with guiding the country out of its economic funk, it’s equally instructive about where he might be taking us. For all his beautiful language – and he truly is a gifted writer – Obama reveals himself to be more of a pragmatist than an idealist.

In the Oval Office

Lincoln President-Elect: Abraham Lincoln and the Great Secession Winter 1860-1861

Author: Harold Holzer

Picked by: Jonathan Dahl / Editor in Chief, SmartMoney magazine

This fall release is a great companion read to current events with President-elect Obama — though obviously a bad economy isn’t quite the same thing as a brewing civil war. Still, the parallels are interesting: A lame-duck, unpopular president (then: James Buchanan) whose hands were more or less tied when it came to solving the great national crisis. There’s an interesting contrast, too. Lincoln generally kept out of the fray until he actually took office, compared with Obama’s proactive steps.

In the Kitchen

How to Cook Everything (10th Anniversary Edition)

Author: Mark Bittman

Picked by: Tom Weber / Editor, SmartMoney.com

Trying to eat more meals at home these days? Penny-pinching isn’t the best reason to have Bittman’s masterpiece in your kitchen. But if that helps motivate you to discover — or rediscover — the simple and healthy pleasure of cooking, so be it. Bittman, who writes a recipe column called “The Minimalist” for The New York Times, stresses a building-from-basics method: Master the key technique for a recipe, then vary it according to your own likes and whims. In this revised edition, that approach is more evident than ever. After you’ve spent some time with this book, you’ll find yourself scanning your kitchen and envisioning what you could prepare from what’s around. That sense of mastery is rewarding in itself. But hey, it’s thrifty too.

In the Streets

Lush Life

Author: Richard Price

Picked by: Will Swarts / Reporter, SmartMoney.com

Worlds collide on the Lower East Side of New York, which gave Price a ripped-from-the-headlines plot when a young actress was shot and killed there in a 2005 mugging gone wrong. Price has a matchless ear for the dialogue heard among the urban tribes of precinct cops, artistically aspiring hipsters and residents of the housing projects on the edges of the gentrifying neighborhood. He weaves them together in the murky account of the shooting of a young bartender during a late-night robbery, crafting a novel that’s as much keenly observed reportage as narrative, focusing on the detectives, the muggers, the bereaved family and Eric Cash, who was at the shooting scene and finds himself in the glare of police suspicion. If it drags a little in sections, "Lush Life" also evokes of the ceaseless pulse of New York, seen through a few sharply-etched fictional inhabitants.

SMARTMONEY ® Layout and look and feel of SmartMoney.com are trademarks of SmartMoney, a joint venture between Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and Hearst SM Partnership. © 1995 - 2009 SmartMoney. All Rights Reserved.



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[Source: SmartMoney.com - Consumer Action - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

The Rockefeller Plan

[Note: Gerald Celente of Trends Research Institute has been heralded by THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, CNBC, CBS, etc. and he has recently said by 2012 [...]

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[Source: Mint Dollar - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

Make Money blogging with Chitika

If you have a blog or website then Chitika is for you.With a good web site you can make alot. For instance I get paid for all the adds on this page. Some stuff I even get a 75% commission. You will need to get traffic to your website and have them click on your adds or order stuff off your page.
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While some people use the Internet for communicating, checking scores, reading the online papers or obtaining information about things they are interested in, others fill in the best online paid surveys to make money. Using them to make a few hundreds of dollars (as part-time job) or even thousands of dollars on a monthly basis, it does not matter, what matters is that There are literally hundreds of sites on the internet claiming to have internet surveys for you to complete but how many actually offer the best paid surveys online?

A quick search will reveal lots of links with titles like Get paid to take surveys!, Get Paid for Your Opinions, Simply fill out surveys for money, Work from home opportunity and so on. Also, just browsing through the Internet, you may encounter such advertisements. This technique is used by different organizations or companies to conduct their market research. You may think that this is another scheme, and that you will never see the money they promise you for filling those surveys.
The fact is that although paid surveys are seen as an easy opportunity, and rightfully so, to actually sign up with enough companies to make it worthwhile is quite a chore and can take a few hours. Is it worth that time? definitely but only if you've got good resources, with a poor list of companies it is just time you could have spent doing something worthwhile.


How do you find the best paid surveys online? Well first you avoid the free list you my come across. You may think this makes no sense and I know from experience how hard it is to resist something that is free when the majority of products making the same offer charge a fee but there is a reason to avoid free sites.

Free sites aren't charities there going to be making money one way or another, after all this isn't a quick blog but a paid for website so they have to be getting something out of it. Plus Why would they give you something that others are charging for? One reason is because they offer an inferior product, which they do, but the main reason is that they make there money in a different way.

If you use a free site you may notice they have a smaller list of companies for you to sign up with. This is partly because they do less work on building the list but the main reason is that they only offer companies that are paying them a commission. That's right they get paid every time someone joins through there links and this is how they make there money.

You may think that this isn't so bad but apart from this meaning they aren't offering the best paid surveys online they are also passing you on to companies who have no other motive than to get your details and send you tons of spam emails in the hope that you buy items from them. The surveys they do offer will be points based where you either need 5000 points to receive $10, and each survey rewards 50 points or where you exchange the points for money off of products in there brochure.

Of course not all the paid sites are any better in fact a few do exactly the same thing but also have the cheek to charge you a fee for the privilege. However if you really want the best paid surveys online you will need the resources only a paid directory can offer.

Money Made Easy! But do you realy have it in you?

Ill tell you what I did and show you the ones to use.

Now I didnt get rich but was able to cash out. Wich is key, First get a free email hotmail,gmail,etc. Your box might fill up with spam. I dont use any real info or share it.

For example Google Adsense pays good but you have to make $100. It will take a beginer 4-6 weeks to get that.

So with a combination of Paid Survery's, Paid EMail's, Free Gift Cards, Adsense,Refferals, And Special offers. I made out good enough to take the time to tell you.

First will start out with a few companys that will get you $10-20 a week each. All the $400 a week stuff is garbage.

PAID EMAIL


www.inboxdollars.com

First week $10.52 Mostly just reading email. I only took 1 survey and recevied a $5 sign up bonus. This website is good for $15-25 and its real easy to read email for money.



http://www.sendearnings.com
Read above exactly the same thing I earn at least 15 bucks a week. Just reading mail. If you take surveys too, its easy to get $35 a week.

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All take alot of work and initialy you wont be happy but with time and a good web site you can make alot. For instance I get paid for all the adds on this page. Some stuff I even get a 75% commission. You will need to get traffic to your website and have them click on your adds or order stuff off your page.


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