Slide Show | June 2011
Financial Innovations
By Marc A. Wojno
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Don’t believe it? Take a look at our list of 15 of the greatest innovations of the 20th Century.
See if you agree, or share your own greatest financial innovations in the reader comment box below or on Kiplinger’s Facebook page. Financial Innovations
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Financial Innovations
1935: Creation of Social Security
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Financial Innovations
1994: Amazon.com
Further enhancements include one-click shopping, customer reviews and e-mail order verification. Amazon.com’s annual sales hit $34.2 billion in 2010; online sales for all e-commerce retailers total $145 billion (in 2009). 1994: Amazon.com
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Financial Innovations
1974: Creation of the IRA
A big perk: Savings grow tax-free until you start taking out the money. In 1997, the Roth IRA is introduced, which features non-deductible contributions and tax-exempt withdrawals. 1974: Creation of the IRA
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Financial Innovations
1967: World’s First ATM
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Financial Innovations
1962: Walmart Is Born
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Financial Innovations
1933: Creation of FDIC
The current coverage limit is $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank. Since its founding, the independent government agency boasts that not a penny’s worth of insured deposits has been lost as a result of a bank failure. Today, the FDIC insures more than $7 trillion held in U.S. banks and thrifts. 1933: Creation of FDIC
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Financial Innovations
1975: The Dawn of Discount Brokerages
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Financial Innovations
1946: First Bank Credit Card
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Financial Innovations
1913: Assembly Line
It eventually sells for as little as $260 (about $5,900 in today’s dollars), down from an original price tag of $850 ($19,300 today), thanks to savings realized from Ford’s assembly-line concept. The manufacturing revolution makes countless products more affordable to the consumer. 1913: Assembly Line
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Financial Innovations
1981: First Frequent-Flier Program
Twenty-five years later, there are 180 million members of frequent-flier programs worldwide. AAdvantage goes on to expand into non-airline businesses, although it isn’t the first loyalty-marketing program -- Sperry & Huchinson introduced the S&H Green Stamps at participating retailers in 1896. 1981: First Frequent-Flier Program
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Financial Innovations
1934: The Birth of Value Investing
Decades later, Graham and Dodd’s “bible for value investors” continues to influence Wall Street. Warren Buffett, a Graham student and a prominent value-investing disciple, is currently worth $50 billion. 1934: The Birth of Value Investing
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Financial Innovations
1978: Creation of the 401(k) Plan
The name is derived from the section of the Internal Revenue Code that authorizes the new retirement savings vehicle.
Hughes Aircraft, Johnson & Johnson and PepsiCo are some of the first companies to adopt the retirement plans. About 60 million workers in the U.S. now actively participate in 401(k)s. 1978: Creation of the 401(k) Plan
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Financial Innovations
1997: Billing and Payments Move Online
Later in the same year, Microsoft and First Data create TransPoint, which allows consumers with Internet access and a secure Web browser to pay bills online. Banks soon follow.
In the U.S., 80% of all households with Internet access now use some form of online banking, and 40% of those wired households pay bills online. 1997: Billing and Payments Move Online
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1924: First Mutual Fund
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Financial Innovations
1976: First Index Fund
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Financial Innovations
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