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Finance

Annual Price Of Raising A Child

January 12, 2017 By Twila Van Leer

That Darling Newborn Will Cost You $233K

Ah! Isn’t he/she cute? But take a closer look at what that darling little one is going to cost you over the next 17 years.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture, the estimated costs of rearing a child today is $233,610. That’s about $14,000 annually. The figure is based on a middle-income family with two children. Kids cost more in the city, also, than they do in rural areas.

The estimates, released recently by the department, are based on 2015 data, so the cost probably increased while you weren’t looking last year. The bottom line is about 3 percent higher than for the previous year, an increase that outstrips overall inflation.

It’s enough to give new parents the heebie-jeebies. The figures calculated by the USDA are used by state governments and courts to prepare child support and foster care guidelines.

The bulk of the costs fall right where you’d imagine: housing, food, transportation, health care, education, clothing and miscellaneous expenses.

Housing Costs

In case you had’n’t noticed, housing is expensive, accounting for 26 to 30 percent of a family’s expenditures. The USDA figures the cost for another child by calculating the cost of an added room to a home. The department admits that it doesn’t calculate into the figure such items as a family’s desire to live in more expensive neighborhood that offer better schools and other amenities attractive to those rearing children.

Middle income married-couple families living in the urban Northeast reported the highest costs – about $253,770 for the 17-year total, ocmpared with the urban West at $235,140; the urban South at $221,730 and the urban Midwest at $217,020. The average rural amount was $193,020. Lower-income families averaged $174,690 per child through age 17. At the other extreme, higher-income families will spend, on average, $372,210.

Food Costs

Following housing on the expense list are health care and food. For the middle-income family, food takes up about 18 percent of the child-rearing budget. Child care and education eat up another 16 percent. Education costs have consistently increased each year since 1960, when the USDA started calculating the costs. At that time, education only devoured 2 percent of the child-rearing costs. Child care also has become an increasingly expensive item with more women entering the labor force.

Education Costs

The report doesn’t even consider the costs of higher education, which usually don’t kick in until after the child is 17. The average annual cost of college now is $47,370 for a private institution, $20,090 for a public college.

New parents who groan at the costs of diapers and formula have even bigger surprises ahead. Between the ages from birth to 2, the little cherub costs only around $12,680 while a teenager 15 to 17 will dip into the family’s finances to the tune of about $13,900 each year. The costs of food, transportation, clothing and health care all escalate for the teens.

Good news for larger families! Those with three or more children spend an average of 24 percent less per child. That’s because kids in large families share rooms, wear hand-me-downs, and inherit older siblings’ toys. Child care facilities often offer sibling discounts.

On the flip side, a single child costs an average 27 percent more.

Filed Under: Consumer Alerts, Life, Personal Finance Tagged With: Personal Finance

Budgets Should Include Savings

June 21, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Recording every penny you spend lets you know how much goes to non-essentials.
Recording every penny you spend lets you know how much goes towards non-essentials.
Personal financial security almost always is built upon a foundation of creating and sticking to a budget. And a budget line dedicated to savings is extra insurance that you are on solid ground, no matter how much you make.

Tracking your spending is a necessary preliminary to creating that budget. Start by recording every penny you spend. And be prepared to be surprised at how much of your money is going into such things as movies, potato chips and other non-essentials.

Sticking To Your True Needs Leaves More For Savings

Once you have a true picture of how you are spending what you earn, the next step is to set a realistic budget that covers all your needs. That is needs, not wants. Needs vary from family to family, but for almost everyone, they include housing, food, water, shelter, clothing and education. The list of “wants” is long and variable, but often includes fast foods, meals out, expensive clothing, over-expensive cars, fancy cell phones and electronic gadgetry.

Engage Your Family In Setting The Budget

Let them help make up the shopping lists and then go through them to see what you can realistically do without. An occasional “fling” can be accommodated, but be sure they stay occasional and don’t become embedded in the budget by default.

Start A Savings Plan

Through your employment you may have access to a 401(k) account. Or set up an IRA (Individual Retirement Account), which is another way to enjoy tax benefits while you save. Keep retirement in mind. It comes sooner than you’d think. Save as much as you can and increase the amount as children grow up and leave home or as your earnings increase.

Consider What Is Practical In The Way Of Education

Too many Americans face retirement with student loans still weighing them down. It may be that you can achieve career goals without a four-year university degree. If you have to borrow to pay for higher education, keep these figures in mind: The typical monthly payment for loans escalates with the type of training you desire, from $54 for vocational school; $60 for an associate degree; $184 for a bachelor’s degree; $220 for a master’s degree; $280 for a college professor; $530 for a professional degree; and $840 for a physician.

Certainly don’t settle for less than you desire, but approach higher education with your eyes open. Start planning early, warn children they may have to work while they go to school, do your best to encourage them to perform well in high school as a springboard to scholarships and other support.

Filed Under: Budgets, Education, Saving Money Tagged With: Budgeting, Investing, money management, Saving Money

Finances Change With Divorce

June 17, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Knowing how to manage money after divorce is essential.
Knowing how to manage money after divorce is essential.
Unfortunately, in a society where divorce is common, no one expects women to be expert in personal finances. They tend to know more about weight loss, cooking and other traditionally feminine matters.

But, according to DivorcedMoms.com, knowing about money and how to manage it (especially when a divorce may have drastically cut your resources) can become absolutely essentially in your new reality. Here are some tips to help in the process.

Hope For The Best, But Be Prepared For The Worst

Though your ex may be as generous as he promised he would be, it often happens that support money begins to lag. Insist on discussing money issues as the split occurs. You’re better off, if possible, to plan on taking care of yourself financially. If you get all the help you are promised, you’ll be pleasantly surprised, and if not, you won’t be devastated.

Educate Yourself

Financial training for women should begin in high school, but it seldom does. If possible, plan to do your own taxes and hone your budgeting and investing skills. Find a consultant, research online or get advice from someone you trust.

Regular Savings Plan

If work is part of the equation for you, be certain that some set percentage of your income goes into savings. Take advantage of employer participation in a retirement savings, if that is feasible. If you still have dependent children, buying a home may be very desirable. But be sure that it’s affordable and leaves you enough for other necessities, including education for the kids. If you need to upgrade employment skills, there are agencies that offer free services or can steer you to affordable options. Don’t be reluctant to explore any options, including government support, if it is necessary to provide for your family.

Have A Strategy

Create long-term goals, including concrete plans on how you are going to achieve them. Get rid of what you don’t need in favor of the things that will help you reach your goals. Be sure your goals are realistic, seeking counseling if necessary to stay within reason. Most women have some assets, such as jewelry or over-expensive cars, that they can convert to cash if necessary. Incurring more debt trying to become financially self-reliant is not a wise way to go.

Live Within Your Budget

It may even do your children good to be forced to expect less. Teach them to live realistically within the new budget now in place. They could thank you for it later. Keep in mind that the old saying is true: You can’t buy happiness. Look for free entertainment, such as board games at the kitchen table, home movie nights, visits to the library, nature walks, local parks, etc.
Love and attention don’t cost anything and they’re the greatest gifts you can give your child. Don’t let your emotional fallout become their problem.

Seek Mediation If Necessary

Resist going to court with your ex-spouse for every dissatisfaction. Lawyers are expensive and courts not cheap. . With divorce child support orders can be changed if your circumstances change, but don’t make money a constantly divisive issue that too often puts children in the middle.

Look around you at all the women who have divorced and succeeded. One needn’t automatically exclude the other. Divorce creates challenges, but it isn’t the end. Learn from it, plan for success and stick with the plan.

Filed Under: Money Management, Personal Finance, Saving Money Tagged With: Budgeting, money management, Personal Finance, Saving Money

More Young Adults Live With Parents

June 11, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

More millennials are choosing to still live with their parents.
More millennials are choosing to continue living with their parents.
For the past century and more, young adults were prone to leave the nest and set up housekeeping for themselves. Now, they are more likely to be residents in the family home, either as singles or with a spouse, according to the Pew Research Center.

Young Adults Waiting To Get Married

The phenomenon, statistically changing the 130-year trend, is as result primarily of young people who delay marriage until into their 30s, the Pew study concluded. In 2014, the percentage of young adults living in their parent’s home was 32.1. It is the largest percentage since 1940, when some 40 percent were living at home.

Young Adults With Less Education

Choosing a spouse or living partner is the most likely condition to prompt living with a parent when the young couple is not prepared financially to be independent. Status of education is also an important factor. Young people with less education may be more likely to remain at home, the study found. The statistical breakdown showed that in 2014, 19 percent of young adults with a bachelor’s degree were living at home; 36 percent of those who had some college but not a degree; and 40 percent of those who had failed to complete high school.

Since 1980, the level of education has been more telling, with college education being a definite benefit in the job market and more of those without a high school diploma dropping into less well-paying jobs.

The trend not to marry as early has had a definite effect, a Gallup Poll shows. In a survey, 60 percent of Millennials said they had never married, compared with 16 percent of Generation Xers and 10 percent of Baby Boomers. The increasing trend for women to succeed in the job market, while more males are floundering is one of the reasons, experts say. The Great Recession had a greater impact for men than for women.

Attitudes also have been in play. Marriage formerly was considered a step to help young couples to reach employment and financial goals. Now, marriage is seen to be the final step to reaching such goals, the researchers report. They delay commitment to marriage until they feel their education and career goals are stable.

The rising costs of education, with a larger percentage of young adults saddled with overwhelming education debt, also enters into the equation. Expectations for “living high” in marriage, which most of their parents did not harbor, have an effect on marriage decisions as well.

Unemployment

Relatively high unemployment rates over the past decade also have been a factor. The number of young men who are unemployed and living at home far outstrips the number who are employed and living independently.

The effect on the parental household of having young adults still in residence is the flip side of the new trends, with some parents delaying retirement and other decisions to accommodate the extra persons they are helping to support.

Filed Under: Education, Personal Finance, Work Tagged With: education, Employment, Personal Finance

Quit Making Excuses. Be Debt-Free

May 3, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Quit making excuses when it  comes to eliminating debt.
Making excuses only keeps you in debt.
Excuses are one of the most available of commodities. Easy to find. Easy to use. But if they are what’s keeping you from becoming free of debt, ditch them and get on with making your personal finances more healthy.

Sometimes, it’s attitude more than finances that keep you shackled to debt. Some self-examination of your beliefs may convince you that you can do better. Here are five common reasons that people stay debt-bound:

I Deserve It

This attitude leads some people to opt for a pricey vacation or a new car of electronic gadget (on credit, of course) that would require only a swift glance at the budget to see it is clearly out of reason. What you’re really saying is “I deserve to be in debt.” And it’s true. The result, however, is more stress, less savings and planning for retirement.

I Don’t Know Where To Start

If you don’t want to look honestly at your debt and accept responsibility for it, this may be the point at which you stop trying. It can be overwhelming to see what a mess you’ve created. But there are some options to consider. Debt consolidation may give you some more wiggle room. Balance transfer credit cards may offer lower interest. Or go to an expert for help. You have to be willing to face the magnitude of your debt load, but keep always in mind that things will be better if you get a handle on it.

I’ll Deal With It Later

The procrastination approach is just another excuse. Waiting for a better job, for your rich uncle to die and leave you wealthy – whatever allows you to delay the process will do just that – delay the process. This is one of those situations in which there’s no time like the present to act. It falls into the same category as the “I’ll diet next week, as soon as the company party is over” delaying tactic.

I Only Need To Make The Minimum Payment

Paying as much as you possibly can on credit card or other debt is a wise move. They longer it takes to pay off a balance, the more interest you pay and the longer you are burdened with the debt. Don’t look at your monthly statement and focus on the lowest figure that catches your eye. Adding a little extra to each payment, even if it is a small amount, will erase the debt faster. And of course, adding to the balance faster than you pay it off will leave you scrambling forever. You damage not only your current financial state, but may rack up less-than-satisfactory credit reports.

I’m Not Responsible

Placing blame on other people or circumstances, even emergencies, is the ultimate excuse. It allows you to refuse to accept responsibilities for your actions. Emergencies happen to all of us and do, inevitably, require changes in financial arrangements. Many creditors recognize genuine budget stress and will cooperate. But too often, debt is caused by trying to live like an upper-class family on a middle-class paycheck. When you get serious about debt reduction, you may have to steel yourselves to bypass your favorite high-end shopping outlets, avoid friends who tend to encourage free spending, and economize on things like eat-out lunches and high-cost entertainment. The best thing you can do is accept that your debt is your debt and you are responsible for it. Getting control of it may be the best feeling you’ve ever had.

Filed Under: Debt Reduction, Personal Finance Tagged With: Debt, money management, save money

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