Trade Research Guide

Fair Trade Muffins Section


 

Fair Trade Muffins Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Fair Trade Makeup Brushes |
Fair Trade Federation Approval Native Brand Cigarettes |
Fair Trade Wooden Toys |
Stores That Promote Fair Trade |
Tceq Trade Fair |
Exhition Fair Global Trade |
Fair Trade Tshirts |
Trade Fairs Show |
Fair Trade And 110 Companies |
Electro Luminescent Manufacturer Trade Fair |
Wholesale Fair Trade Clothing |
Fair Trade Imports |
Fair Trade Fixtures |
Cathal Ruane Fair Trade |
Fair Trade Commision |

List of fair-trade Articles

Fair Trade Muffins Best seller



Best Fair Trade Muffins products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Fair Trade Muffins sponsors


 

Latest Fair Trade Muffins Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Fair Trade Muffins!



Fair Trade: A Beginner's Guide (Beginner's Guides)
-By: Jacqueline Decarlo
-Price: $7.44 (New)
$7.42 (Used)

Fair Trade for All: How Trade Can Promote Development
-By: Joseph E. Stiglitz, Andrew Charlton
-Price: $16.00 (New)
$8.80 (Used)

Brewing Justice: Fair Trade Coffee, Sustainability, and Survival
-By: Daniel Jaffee
-Price: $19.08 (New)
$14.90 (Used)

Confronting the Coffee Crisis: Fair Trade, Sustainable Livelihoods and Ecosystems in Mexico and Central America (Food, Health, and the Environment)
-Price: $19.30 (New)
$19.30 (Used)

Fair Trade and a Global Commodity: Coffee in Costa Rica (Anthropology, Culture and Society)
-By: Peter Luetchford
-Price: $25.69 (New)
$29.94 (Used)

Fair Trade Coffee: The Prospects and Pitfalls of Market-Driven Social Justice (Studies in Comparative Political Economy and Public Policy)
-By: Gavin Fridell
-Price: $24.78 (New)
$28.73 (Used)

 

Welcome to Trade Research Guide

 

Fair Trade Muffins Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Fair Trade Muffins. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Two Things You Need To Know About Prepaid Debit Cards

from: Gunnar Berglund




According to the September 2004 issue of the Nilson Report, around $588 billion dollars worth of debit cards were bought in the United States in 2003. By 2008 that volume is expected to grow to $1.231 trillion putting a significant dent in the nation’s use of pure credit cards as consumers continue to favor the use of prepaid debit cards. If you are among the nation’s millions who are currently using prepaid debit cards or are among those considering their use, you need to know two things that may detract and enhance your use of the prepaid debit card.

First, know what you’re getting. Most people understand the prepaid debit card as the retail gift card. Others know that such gift cards can be purchased through their local bank. What some consumers don’t know is that those purchased through their bank can come with hefty fees attached, and those fees can come in a myriad of disguises from up-front purchase fees to various administration fees including replacement costs account maintenance fees and fees for checking the balance. Such fees are currently being debated in the courts, but until a fair resolution is offered, it is up to the consumers to be aware of what they are buying.

Second, despite consumer and fair trade concerns, some applications of the prepaid debit card are both innovative and convenient. For example, there are now some tax preparation services offering what is known as the “stored value” card. In other words, in lieu of waiting for your refund to arrive, you can simply tell your tax preparation service that you would like to have your refund loaded onto your prepaid debit card. Once you have your prepaid debit card “loaded” you can make arrangements with your bank to assign it a routing number so that you may use it just like a checking account. Another new use of prepaid debit cards come from the currency exchange companies, better known as remittance services. The usual remittance companies such as Western Union and MoneyGram are facing new competition from small companies who are targeting the immigration population by offering speed and convenience in sending money on-line using a bank account, a credit card or a PayPal account. The customer simply electronically “loads” the desired amount onto a Visacard which is then mailed to the beneficiary.

With the help of the internet, the potential to send money via “loaded” cards is without precedent. The ease, speed and convenience of such services are becoming so popular that many companies are aggressively marketing prepaid debit cards to consumers through customization. Visa, for example, has a prepaid debit card marketed exclusively to teens, know as Buxx. American Express has the TravelFunds Card marketing “for people on the go” and MasterCard has its I-Gen MasterCard marketed to those who prefer to either forego traditional checking accounts or keep only a minimum amount while “loading” their card with the cash their budgets dictate they can spend.

About the Author

© Gunnar Berglund>br? Gunnar Berglund has been working
on the Internet for about five years and run
http://www.global-prepaid-cards.com since September 2003








 

Fair Trade Muffins News

No relevant info was found on this topic.

 

Warning: fopen(feed.xml) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home/powertra/public_html/fair-trade/datas/rss_gen.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/powertra/public_html/fair-trade/datas/rss_gen.php on line 132

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/powertra/public_html/fair-trade/datas/rss_gen.php on line 134