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Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common questions about FiscalScope, what the programs cover, and how we approach financial education for variable income earners.

General questions

FiscalScope is a financial education center. We produce educational programs, articles, and resources focused on personal finance for people with variable or informal incomes in Mexico. We explain financial concepts in plain language without recommending specific products or providing regulated financial advice.
No. FiscalScope is not a bank, financial institution, investment firm, insurance company, or regulated financial service provider of any kind. We are an educational content organization. We explain concepts and frameworks — we do not offer financial products, manage money, or provide regulated advice.
The programs are designed for people whose income doesn't follow a fixed monthly schedule. This includes market vendors, freelance workers, seasonal laborers, daily-rate workers, independent contractors, and anyone whose earnings vary from week to week or month to month. The concepts are explained from that starting point, without assuming a regular payslip.
The educational content available on this website is informational and accessible without a fee. If you have specific questions about the scope of our programs or how to access content, please contact us directly.

Program questions

No. None of our programs recommend specific banks, savings accounts, investment funds, insurance products, or any other financial instrument. The programs explain concepts and how people think about money. What you do with that understanding is your own decision.
Yes. The concepts in our programs apply regardless of income level. Understanding what cash flow means, how an emergency fund works conceptually, and what savings terminology refers to is useful at any income level. The programs don't assume a minimum income threshold.
Each program is designed to be useful on its own. If you're new to financial concepts, starting with Program 1 (Cash Flow Basics) provides useful context for the others. Program 3 (Savings Concepts) works well as a standalone vocabulary reference. Program 2 (Emergency Reserve) builds on ideas from Program 1, so reading them in order is helpful but not required.
The programs are designed with Mexico's working context in mind and are written in Spanish (with an English version of the site for accessibility). The underlying financial concepts are universal, but the framing and examples are oriented toward the informal and variable income realities common in Mexico.

Content questions

No. The content on this site is educational and informational only. It explains financial concepts and how they work in general. It does not constitute financial advice, investment guidance, or any form of regulated financial service. If you need personal financial advice, you should consult a qualified and regulated financial advisor.
You can contact us with questions about our programs, our content approach, or how to navigate the material. We are not able to provide personalized financial advice, evaluate your specific financial situation, or tell you what to do with your money. For those needs, a regulated financial advisor is the appropriate resource.
We add articles and resources periodically. The core program content is reviewed and updated as needed to ensure accuracy. The blog section reflects more recent additions. If you have a topic you'd like to see covered, you're welcome to suggest it via the contact page.

Didn't find your question here? Contact us and we'll do our best to point you in the right direction. We respond to questions about our programs and content approach.