10 Reasons to Join the Military

Have you ever thought about joining the US Military? If the answer is yes, then read on. These benefits of joining the military may be enough to persuade you to take the leap. If you have n’t considered joining the military, then treat this article as a primer for some of the benefits which may be available to you if you decide to take that next step. And the benefits can last a life time!

10 Reasons to Consider Joining the Armed Forces

Whether you are considering the military out of a sense of Patriotism or duty, for action and adventure, or for a steady job in a depressed economy, there is something for everyone. Here are 10 reasons the military may be a good fit for you.

Reasons to join the military

10 great reasons to join the military

1.  Jobs in a down economy. The US has experienced a difficult economy over the last few years, including high levels of unemployment, rising costs, and the outsourcing of many jobs. If you are looking for employment, consider the military, which continues to offer jobs for those who are qualified medically and academically, and who do not have an extensive criminal record.

2.  Pay and benefits. A new second lieutenant starts at over $36,000 a year plus full benefits, not including added monthly allowances of up to $3,000, depending on where he or she is stationed. An enlisted person starts at around $20,000 a year plus full benefits, not including added monthly allowances of up to $1,500 depending on where he or she is stationed. Enlistment and re-enlistment bonuses can be over $20,000. After serving only 3 years, some nuclear trained enlisted members in the Navy receive bonuses of $90,000 for re-enlisting. Student loans can be relieved by up to $65,000. The military is also one of the few places where you can get a full pension after serving 20 years or more. Military retirement can reach 50-75% of the average of your final three years base salary. In some instances, you can receive more than 75% of your base pay in retirement.

3.  Full medical coverage for you and your family. Military members are immediately eligible for full health care benefits for themselves and their immediate family members as soon as they enter the service, and if you stay through until retirement, you and your family can take these benefits with you when you leave the military. These health benefits extend to immediate family (e.g. spouses and children, and sometimes dependent parents). You may also be eligible for temporary military healthcare benefits after you leave the service.

4. Skills and training. The military provides advanced technical training in a variety of career fields and also offers opportunities for additional training when you are off-duty. Many military members are able to attend college that is often paid for by tuition assistance. You can use your training opportunities to advance within your career field, earn certifications or degrees, or prepare yourself to transition back into civilian life.

5. Leadership opportunities. Military leadership is a great way to get your resume on top of the pile for your next career. If you were to hire someone, would you want to hire someone with proven skills and experience and a degree, or someone right out of high school/college? Give me the experienced professional any day of the week! (More tips for creating your post-military resume).

6. Travel opportunities and vacation time. The military has installations all around the world and pays for you and your family to get there and back. Your off duty time is yours and you are free to travel and see the world. The military gives you 30 days of paid leave per year, not including weekends and federal holidays, depending on your job.

7.  A lifetime of benefits for your survivors. One major reason many students don’t consider the military is the perception of a high mortality rate. This is primarily caused by the media. In the unlikely event of a service member’s death, the surviving family is given an immediate $100,000 death gratuity benefit, a $400,000 lump sum (if elected) life insurance benefit, social security and indemnity monthly pays for years, and the transferability of many VA benefits. The military member’s time served is not taken for granted.

Benefits After Leaving the Service

8.  Education opportunities after you leave the military. The new GI Bill pays veterans who served at least 36 months a monthly living stipend and full tuition to pay for college, after they leave the military. Depending on how long the service member commits, this GI Bill can be transferred to spouses and children.

9.  Buy a home with no money down with a VA Loan. The Veterans Affairs office offers veterans a way to purchase a home with no money down through the VA Loan. This makes it easier to purchase a home while you are serving, or after you have left the service.

10.  A military retirement is worth millions. An officer with 20 years of service, who earns over $100,000 per year, could retire with a pension of over $48,000 per year for life in his or her 40′s and start a second career. Imagine earning over $4000 per month for the rest of one’s life, starting at age 42. This equates to an accumulative pay of $480,000, $960,000, $1.4 million in 10, 20, and 30 years, respectively, in addition to having full health care coverage and an income from a second job, if desired. (Oh, and those numbers don’t account for annual cost of living adjustments which increase your monthly pension).

Bonus Benefit

Membership into one of the world’s oldest clubs. Being a military veteran makes you an automatic member in one of the world’s oldest clubs. It is easy to share stories and recollections with other members of this special group of people, and can help you gain acceptance, join clubs, find employment, and gain other benefits. Being a veteran is something no one can ever take away from you.

About the author:  Romeo Clayton has served as enlisted and officer in the US Navy. He is the author of How We Prevent Wealth: A Personal Finance Reflection, a free online book that details his theory of why so many people lose out on the opportunity to build wealth. He is also active on his own personal finance blog, www.romeoclayton.com.

Photo credit: United States Forces – Iraq (Inactive)

Veterans United Connect: Connecting Our Heroes!

Military life has historically revolved around soldiers forming strong bonds with the men and women they served with; however, through frequent relocations, many service members lose touch with the close friends made along the way.

One unique Facebook application has been designed to close the gap and bring veterans and service members together on a single platform. The free app, called Veterans United Connect, lets military members and families find and reconnect with old friends and make new ones based on a shared history of service.

Connecting With Old Friends

Veterans United ConnectUsers access the app through their Facebook accounts and will need to input when and where they served. After including this information, the app will automatically generate friend suggestions and personalized matches based on the specific user’s service history.

For instance, a soldier who served with the 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Stewart or any other installation can find and reconnect with friends, upload photos, share their stories, and catch up on the community they previously knew as home. In addition, the app isn’t limited to military bases on U.S. soil, you can find friends from installations worldwide.

“My husband has a common name, which makes it tough for his old buddies to track him down through the typical social networking sites,” said Adrienne May, an Army spouse active in the online military spouse communities. “This app makes it easy to find people based on where they served or even through something as specific as boot camp. It’s going to make finding old friends and staying in touch so much easier.”

Connect With New Communities

Veterans United Connect isn’t only for veterans, but for active duty personnel and their families as well. Active duty members are using Veterans United Connect to bond with new communities, find friendly faces, and build support networks after they PCS.

All military families are encouraged to use Veterans United Connect to share information on schools, housing, base life, along with many other topics that will make soldiers and families new to the community feel welcome.

“The goal is to foster even stronger ties and communication among a community that’s already given so much to our country,” said Rob Stretch, social media manager for Veterans United, a financial services firm that’s sponsoring the application. “The bonds they forge can be life-long. We want to enhance their experiences during and post-service as much as possible.”

A pilot version of the app launched in 2009 and was featured in Stars & Stripes. The new version will officially launch July 25, and features many important upgrades. Veterans United Connect is expected to have more than 500,000 users by the end of 2011. Join now and reconnect with friends everywhere!

Matt Polsky is the Senior Content Manager for VAMortgageCenter.com, the nation’s leading provider of VA home loans.

Commit Your Budget to Paper or Pay a High Price

The first rule of personal finance has always been creating a budget. While some people don’t use any budget, others feel they’ve got their budgeting system stored in their head. They are satisfied to know they have a ‘good idea’ of how they spend their money.

It would be nice if we only had one or two financial matters to concern ourselves with each month but unless you are a teenage student with a part-time job, there will be multiple factors influencing your finances. The only tried and true way for developing a successful and useful budget is to commit it to paper.

Why Physical Budgets Matter

A budget is more than a list of numbers. It should be an interactive tool you use faithfully to determine your every money move. A budget spreadsheet is very simple to develop but in order for it to be effective, you must supply it with the right information. It can be easy to overlook certain aspects of your finances so if you are not confident you can map out a proper budget, there are many budgeting worksheets available that provide popular categories of expenses you may forget. By using a template version of a budget, you can customize the information to meet your needs.

By putting all of your financial data on paper, you actually get a true visual picture of the facts of your finances. For some people who are putting the data down for the first time, they actually experience shock at just how much they are spending and how much money they don’t really have.

A physical budget is also an essential part of family finances. Even if just one spouse/partner controls the cash flow each month, everyone in the family old enough to tackle family finances also needs to take an active participation in family budgeting. Without a proper paper or electronic budget spreadsheet, it will become impossible to express how the finances work.

Commitment to Your Budget Matters

It is not enough to fill in the blanks of a budget worksheet once, never to return. A budget should be an interactive and regular part of your week. You should continue to update and rework the numbers of your budget and eventually it will become habit for you to commit to progressive budgeting strategies.

When income changes, when bills increase or decrease, or when cuts need to be made to save more money, a budget that is kept up-to-date will help to accommodate these changes with ease. It will prevent you from having to start over from scratch time and time again. If a major lifestyle change occurs such as job loss or medical issues, a current budget will be able to show at a glance how to plan for the changes necessary.

Numbers in your head will never work. You need to first track where you are spending your income and then get to work on committing to a physical budget. It truly is the only way to stay in the know on all of your financial matters. Guesswork does not make anyone financially savvy or financially stable so it is in your best interest to sit down with your money matters and construct the start of your budgeting life today.

Debbie Dragon is a professional freelance writer, specializing in personal finance. She frequently writes for Vertex42.com which offers a large selection of free spreadsheet templates and financial calculators.

The Only Mutual Fund You Should Invest In

The only mutual fund you should buy is an index fund.

The first and still the best known of these is the Vanguard 500 Index Fund.  As the name implies, this mutual fund mimics the S&P 500 index.  Why is investing in the S&P 500 a good idea? Because historically, it has averaged 11% annually.  How many mutual funds can beat that?  Not many.

Here are some more reasons why you should only invest in an index fund:

80% of mutual funds under perform the S&P 500. Scary, but true.  Why waste your time trying to find one that’s going to do better, when there is an 80% chance you’re going to be wrong?

Index funds have significantly lower management fees. Having a highly qualified team to pick the fund’s stocks is expensive and it eats into the profits.  An index fund doesn’t have to do any research; they just buy and sell the stocks to match the S&P or another index. Want to have some fun with numbers? Plug in some normal returns into a compound interest calculator, then do it again with half a point less interest. That is the difference between a mutual fund and an index fund.

Mutual funds have too much money to invest very well. Think about it, you can’t invest more than a few hundred thousand dollars in a stock without driving up the price.  If you have a billion dollars to invest, that means you will have to pick dozens of stocks.  That means the management must constantly pick stocks and re-evaluate their current holdings.  It also means that if any one stock does particularly well, it doesn’t effect the bottom line very much.  There are only so many stocks out there for managers to choose from, when they have to pick 50 stocks that means only 10% of the stocks are in their top 5 choices, the other 90% are pretty far down the list.  How well do you think their 48th, 49th and 50th choice are going to do?

Mutual funds are too hard to understand. Investors should always follow the axiom “Only invest in what you understand.”  It is time consuming enough to evaluate one stock.  Can you really expect to understand and evaluate all 50, 100 or 200 stocks in a mutual fund?  If you’re going to take the time to understand the stocks in a mutual fund then you might as well just buy the stocks yourself.

Moral of the story: Don’t buy a mutual fund unless its an index fund.

Ryan G. says: Index funds have long been recognized to be attractive investment options because of the principles outlined above. Vanguard is a great option because they have great funds and are generally among the lowest priced index funds available to the general public (Vanguard is a also non-profit company; their goal is to make it easier for investors to direct more of their money to their investments and spend less of their money supporting the company running the fund). This article is not meant to be an endorsement for Vanguard, but for index funds in general. As always, do you research before buying any equities or other investments.

About the author: This is a guest article by Ryan Delany, aka HarvardMarine. Ryan is the author of Semper Finance, an investing blog geared to military members and individuals with a goal of improving their net worth.