Top ten tips on how to stop subsidising the fat cats
Not everyone handles their money badly. In fact, most people manage to make smart financial decisions for themselves and their families, even if they aren't always buying low, selling high, and getting the best deal ever.
But some folks do make money mistakes that cost them dearly. Those people, who tend to be poorer and less well-educated, end up "subsidising" the more well-to-do by overpaying for financial products and services, according to new research from Harvard University. Those overpayments allow savvier savers and investors to get the same products for less than their real economic costs might be.
The study, done by economics professor John Y. Campbell, concluded that "some financial products involve a cross-subsidy from naive to sophisticated households."
Costs
He singles out mortgages and mutual funds as two types of products that can cost a lot more for people who don't know how to ask the right questions and end up paying too much in points, service fees or brokerage fees. But there are others, as well.
Being at the low end of the economic chain is hard enough, without having to subsidise those who are better off. Here's how to make sure you don't end up being one of the chumps that Campbell writes about.