Household Income
Household Income
Lucky Dip
Household Expenditure
Household Expenditure
100

1. Define Income

2. Define Employment

1. Money Received by a person or coming into a household

2. Doing work for payment 

100

1. Define Employee

2. Define Employer

1. People who work for employers in return for payments

2. People who pay others to work for them

100

What do these words have in common?

Company car, Company phone, Free parking at work, free food at work, health insurance which is paid by an employer

These are all examples of BIK - Benefits in Kind!

100

What is expenditure?

Expenditure refers to the way people spend their income to satisfy various needs and wants

100

Give 3 examples of Fixed Expenditure

Mortgage Repayments

Rent

TV Licence


Insurance Costs

200

Give two examples:

1. An example of regular income

2. An example of irregular income

1. Wages, salaries, child benefit, pensions, Jobseeker's Benefit 


2. Overtime (for working extra hours), Bonus (reward for meeting work targets), Windfall (unexpected income)

200

Explain the difference between a salary and a wage

A salary is a fixed annual payment made to an employee for an agreed amount of work. A wage is a payment received for work done based on work completed or on the amount of time spent working.

200

Name three examples of statutory deductions

PAYE (Pay as you Earn)

PRSI (Pay Related Social Insurance)

USC (Universal Social Charge)


200

What is discretionary expenditure? Give three examples as a group!

Spending on non-essential items that we choose to buy

--> Entertainment | Holidays | Gifts | Expensive Items e.g. cars, furniture, household electronics 

--> Premium sports channels / streaming services 

e.g. Netflix / Disney Plus / Hulu 

200

Give three examples of irregular expenditure

Grocercies

Clothing , Light & Heat

Waste & Recycling charges, Repairs

Telephone Bills, Education Costs

300

Compare and contrast time rate and piece rate 

Time rate: wages based on number of hours worked vs piece rate: wages are based on number of items completed


300

Explain the difference between Gross Pay vs Net Pay

Gross Pay: is the total pay before any deductions 

Net Pay: is the amount left after all deductions from gross pay have been made (take-home pay)

300

Name Three Voluntary Deductions

Pension

Savings

Loan Repayments

Private Health Insurance

Trade Union Membership

300

Define Current expenditure 

Current Expenditure is repeated or ongoing short-term spending 

300

What is impulse buying?

Impulse buying is when we buy things in an unplanned way or in the spur of the moment

400

Disposable vs discretionary income

Disposable income is income left after all taxes have been paid 

Discretionary Income is income left over after taxes and essential spending

400

What is a payslip?

By law, employers must provide employees with a payslip either electronically or on paper to show how much they have earned and how much money has been deducted.

400

Fixed vs Irregular Expenditure - Explain!

Fixed Expenditure means that the amount spent does not change with usage 

Irregular Expenditure is spending where the amount changes with usage

400

Define Capital Expenditure 

Capital expenditure is once-off or long-term spending

400

What is a false economy?

A false economy is a purchase that appears to be good value for money but in the long term turns out to be more expensive or poor value for money!

500

What is the minimum wage?

The minimum wage is the lowest hourly rate an employer must pay an employee by law

500

What is the living wage?

The living wage is the lowest hourly rate an employee needs to earn in order to have a basic but acceptable standard of living.

500

Can both income and expenditure be recorded in an analysed cash book?

Yes they can!

500

Explain opportunity cost

Opportunity cost is measured in terms of the 'next best thing' we could have done with our money. When we decide to use our money for one particular purpose we lose the chance (opportunity) to do something else with that money.

500

Suggest 3 solutions to overspending!

Cut back on spending | postpone non-essential spending | spread large payments over a longer period of time | use savings or surplus money from previous months | generate extra income | borrow money