Sponsored Links
 
Latest Articles
 
Member's Resources
 
Members Log In
Home    What is SOW?    Who Are We?    W.O.W.    Wealth Forum    Advertise For Wealth    Disclaimer    Terms Of Use    Privacy Statement    Newsletter    Testimonies    Contact Us

Wealth Resources By Country
News!
The W.O.W. System
Wealth Resources
Wealth Creation Strategy
Wealth Education
Wealth Products
Wealth Services
Wealth Events
Wealth Experts
Wealth Queries
Wealth Factsheet
Wealth Articles
Wealth Tools
Wealth Games
Wealth Planning & Management
Financial Capitals of the World
 
Dubai - U.A.E.
Frankfurt - Germany
Hong Kong
London - U.K.
New York - U.S.A.
Paris - France
Seoul - South Korea
Shanghai - China
Singapore
Taipei - Taiwan
Tokyo - Japan
Copyright © 2008. Strategy of Wealth. All Rights Reserved.
Members Log Out
Seeking Financial Advice - Selecting the right candidate

10 ways to overcome the shrinking dollar

How to beat inflation?

Common Fallacies of Investing

5 Things to take note before you refinance your home loan


A Well-Diversified Portfolio = Healthy Investments

Have You Got Your Longevity Risk Covered?

How To Profit From The Forex Market?

Your Piggy Bank is Protected in the Event of a Bank Run

When Investing, Patience is Essential

More Articles...
pulzzz.com
Technical Analysis on the Singapore and U.S. Markets. Providing in-depth alerts for traders and investors
FREE Members Registration
Strategy of Wealth
AFP - 15 June 2010
Sons more likely to Swindle their Mums

SYDNEY (AFP) - – Sons are more likely to cheat their elderly parents out of money than daughters, according to an Australian study that indicates the financial abuse of seniors may be on the increase.

With Australians generally living longer and becoming wealthier, the issue of how families handle inheritances and the transfer of assets is becoming increasingly important, the report for Victoria's State Trustee found.

"The data we were able to find confirmed that the majority of older people coming to the attention of organisations because of financial abuse are women," the report released this week said.

"And that the people most likely to be perpetrating the abuse are sons and, to a lesser extent, daughters."

The average age for the senior subjected to swindling was around 80, with nearly a third older than 84, and some suffering from dementia and other illnesses, it said.

Forgery, misappropriating pension funds, pushing someone to change their will and transferring property titles are among the problems reported to the trustee, which manages the affairs of some 9,000 disabled Victorians.

"It's the State Trustees' experience that these crimes are increasing, but that's anecdotally," manager Steven Cowell told AFP on Tuesday. "And disturbingly, it appears to be sons rather than daughters."

Cowell said adult children often showed no remorse over their financial crimes, believing they were entitled to their parents' assets.

And he said rising property prices were contributing to the problem.

"A workman's cottage in the inner city of Melbourne, which wasn't worth much in 1950, is now a million dollar opportunity," he said. "It's easy wealth."

He said while adult children often set out to manage their parents' financial affairs in good faith, over time it could become confusing over who owned what and sometimes elderly parents were left with nothing.
"The tragic part of all these crimes is that monies are rarely retrieved," he said.