Want to squeeze more happiness out of your dollars? Use your money to buy time.
NO. 7: THE TWO easiest financial wins are paying off credit card debt and putting enough in our 401(k) to get the full employer match. Failing to do either is the height of financial foolishness.
PRESENT VALUE. Suppose you figure you’ll need $200,000 in 18 years to pay for your daughter’s college education and you reckon you can earn 6% a year over the intervening 18 years. How much would you need to set aside today to cover the cost? The present value would be $70,069 or, alternatively, you might commit to saving $525 every month.
TALK TO YOUR KIDS about money. Forget lectures and instead teach your children by telling family stories, setting a good example and sharing your financial life. Show them your account statements. Detail where your paycheck goes. Discuss your goals. Tell them about your struggles when you first entered the workforce and had precious little money.
NO. 17: WE'LL PAY a steep price to consume right away. Welcome to hyperbolic discounting: We put a premium on consuming today, often paying extra to make it happen, even if the cheaper alternative requires waiting just a few days. Think of folks who pay up for overnight delivery or who borrow to finance today’s purchases, rather than saving up first.
NO. 7: THE TWO easiest financial wins are paying off credit card debt and putting enough in our 401(k) to get the full employer match. Failing to do either is the height of financial foolishness.
MY TWIN DAUGHTERS just finished sorting through college offers and making their decision ahead of the May 1 acceptance deadline. With nearly 3,000 four-year colleges to choose from, how did they decide?
It wasn’t easy. The pandemic didn’t just close our local public schools. It also ended visits from universities and limited school-based college counseling. Counselors compensated with lunchtime workshops, links to webinars, and lots of robocalls and emails urging students to fill out and submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).
WHAT SHOULD I DO with the required minimum distributions from my rollover IRAs?
I’m age 65, which means that—under last year’s tax law—I must begin taking taxable distributions in 2030, the year I turn 73. I’ve been looking at my retirement cash flow, and it appears that my wife and I won’t need the money for our living expenses.
I’m investigating using the money to help fund my grandkids’ college education. I built a spreadsheet that maps my age against the age of each grandchild and determined the years they’re expected to attend college.
GOT COLLEGE-BOUND kids? Make sure you and your children are on the right track financially—with these 10 questions:
Can you afford to help your kids with college costs? It’s important to talk to your teenagers early on about how much financial assistance you can offer—and that’s doubly true if they’ll need to shoulder much or all of the cost.
Will your family receive needs-based financial aid? Use the EFC calculator at CollegeBoard.org to figure out how much aid you might get.
HELPING YOUR CHILD choose a college that’s a good fit—and that you and your teenager can afford—can be a confusing process. The right fit can be a life- and paycheck-enhancing experience. The wrong fit can be a waste of time and money.
In the past two years, my wife and I have helped our son and daughter pick colleges. Along the way, we’ve learned four lessons I wish we’d known at the start of the process.
SHORTLY BEFORE MY first child was born some two decades ago, I read a newspaper column urging parents to begin saving for college early in their children’s lives. Today, my son is not far from getting his bachelor’s degree in engineering, debt-free and (fingers crossed) with a bit in the bank for his master’s degree. My daughter starts college this fall and is on track for the same outcome.
I feel like we’ve been a real life middle-class experiment,
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