T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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209.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Feb 09 1996 13:59 | 20 |
| I think you might find a lot more discussion in the INVESTING conference
(and/or COLLEGE).
I agree with those who say to not put lots of money in your kids' names. The
reason for this is that the colleges will consider just about all of that
money available for college, whereas they'll consider a smaller portion of
the parents' assets.
If you want to maximize your potential for loans and grants, the system,
unfortunately, encourages parents to "bulk up" on debt - refinance that house,
buy a new car, owe LOTS of money. Don't pay off the mortgage early - you'll
just be forced to remortgage.
On the other hand, if you are looking 10-15 years out, put money away
regularly in a stock mutual fund - often recommended are index funds that
track the S&P 500 (such as Vanguard Index 500). If you use an index fund,
it will tend to generate little in the way of taxable distribution along
the way (which may or may not be a good idea from your perspective.)
Steve
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209.2 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Feb 09 1996 14:02 | 8 |
| Oh, and to add a perspective relevant to this file, many courts have held that
divorced parents are obligated to pay for a child's college education, even
though there is no such requirement for married parents. You may not get a
choice of which college the kid attends - if he wants Harvard, you have to
cough up. If you have remarried, your spouse's income and assets are also
included in the formula.
Steve
|
209.3 | Why not kid's accounts? | EVMS::MARION | So many fish ... | Fri Feb 09 1996 16:16 | 8 |
| I'm interested in more info on why not accounts in kid's names. I
don't have kids, but my brother and his wife opened accounts for their
two kids the minute they were born. My parents and I each find some
excuse to put money in there occasionally towards their education. It
makes a nice addition to Christmas or birthday gifts to enclose a check
towards their college fund.
Karen.
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209.4 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Feb 09 1996 16:53 | 19 |
|
> I'm interested in more info on why not accounts in kid's names. I
When you fill out the Financial Aid Forms (FAF), they use a formula to
determine how much money should be "available" form the parent and
the child for their "contribution" the the child's education. A
much higher percentage of the money that is in the child's name is
considered "available".
I found out too that if I had spent all my money, gone into debt up
to my eyeballs for house, new car, etc I would have qualified for
more financial aid for my kids than I do by trying to save my money.
Too late.
Check out the book 'THE NEW COLLEGE FINANCIAL AID SYSTEM' by David
Jaffe, Council Oak Books, ISBN 0-933031-82-3.
fred();
|
209.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Feb 09 1996 20:52 | 8 |
| The other reason is that you can't control what happens to the kids'
account. When they turn 18, it's up to them to decide how to spend it.
What if the kid doesn't go to college at all?
It's better to keep the bulk of the money in an adult's name for better
control (and less impact on financial aid applications.)
Steve
|
209.6 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 12 1996 08:49 | 23 |
| .2 Many courts have held accountable the NCP male. One man had for his
only daughter $60,000.00. Which was in the mothers/CP name. And was
spent before she was of college age. The state of New Hampshire and its
beloved DCYS tryed to snooker him to pay, AGAIN, college tuition. He
was bankrupt, lost his business in the divorce, sold off his machines,
and was working at Tri-Angle Pacific. There was no way he could foot
the kind of college he had set his daughter up with now.
Lucky, he was able to prove that DCYS was over the bounds in what the
could and could not do. And was able to prove that the $60,000 was
spent by the ex in a very high life style for a few years. Now his
daughter, like many of us have, will have to work her way thru college.
Insofar as .0 goes. Its best to talk to a finacial adviser. Someone who
can help you plan it out, as well as a good CPA. And stick to your
budget. I also know of a woman whose mom and dad went without and put
up the money in stocks and bonds. And because of this, she could not
get into some colleges because her parents made too much, and she could
not get fincial aid to these colleges although there was a health stash
of cash. But, this was not enough to carry her thru college. She was a
former tenant of mine.
|
209.7 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 12 1996 09:45 | 6 |
| Another big sore spot in financial aid is that if you pay child
support, there is no way to deduct that on the Financial Aid Form
(FAF), but if you receive child support, you must declare it as
income.
fred();
|
209.8 | Let the Kids help Pay! | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Mon Feb 19 1996 10:36 | 40 |
| I don't think it's a bad idea to ask your kids to take out student
loans and/or get work-study programs, to help pay for their own
education. This will make them appreciate it more, think carefully
about what kind of degree they want to pursue, and get the good
feelings of accomplishment that come from doing something for yourself.
I'm not saying you shouldn't help them--either now or by helping to
repay the loans. i'm just saying, why should all the burden be on your
shoulders? Your life counts for something too. Of course, I speak from
a very personal perspective. I put myself through BU night school for a
computer science degree, while I was a single parent (getting no child
support, I might add, and working as a cleaning lady to support myself
and my daughter) and graduated at age 31. I still owe about
$10,000 in student loans. My daughter decided to go to Clark
University, NOT a cheap school, four years ago. I told her at the time
that I would help her however much I was able, but that she would have
to take the primary responsibility for paying for her education.
She is about to graduate this May. She's worked very hard and will be
graduating with honors. She will owe about $23,000 in loans. I'm torn
at times as to whether I should concentrate on repaying my own loan, or
help her first. I'm finally starting to make decent money. But after
being poor basically my whole adult life, I don't want to feel that,
OK, I finally worked my own way out of debt, now I have to spend the
rest of my life paying off my daughter's debts. I also married a man
who has a lot of debt, and a job that doesn't pay well. I married for
love, not money! It's a tricky balancing act.
I know that when I start thinking that I'm just a
machine whose purpose in life is to make money to throw into a
bottomless pit, I get a little ornery! Anyway, this issue is a whole
other note, I guess.
I will say that my daughter has told me a number of times that she's
very proud of herself for accomplishing this pretty much on her own.
She has a very down-to-earth, adult attitude, unlike some of the kids
who got everything handed to them. This feeling of self-reliance will
be a big asset in her adult life.
Hope this perspective helps.
Anne
|
209.9 | off | MTVIEW::JOHN | | Mon Apr 15 1996 13:54 | 23 |
| Hello,
how about a child that never asks, or asks like this "I picked the colledge"
"There is an event this saturday" I got tired of asking, "well?"
Should a step-dad pay for step childrens college even if the child
does not ask for it?
Some history. She doesn't want to work. Doesn't want to go
in the military because she would have to clean her bed. Wants a car.
has picked her college in OK, even though we live in CA. Poor grades
allowed the CA schools to say she is not atadmitted.
I just invested 4000.00 to save 200000 on the house loan.
college is 40000 for four years, what is the return on my investment?
and yes, I need a attitude adjustment.
We have 10 rules in the house, she has broken 8 of them. We have had the
house for 3 years. I have been married for three years.
Andrew
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209.10 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Apr 15 1996 15:31 | 10 |
| If grades are poor, and money is tight, try a two year college to get
her some sort of bread and butter degree vs a lovely degree that is
wonderful and nice.... but doesn't make her a living that would allow
her to find that financial independence.
Sould a step dad pay? Gee. Mine helped. I didn't free load, I worked
pumping gas, flipping burgers, and framing houses, and got some help
from the folks. It wasn't easy.:)
|
209.11 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Apr 29 1996 15:09 | 19 |
|
My opinion is that you are not obligated to pay. I told my kids, "If
I pay, then you are going to a school I can afford". If you do feel
like contributing, if it were me, and with the poor grades, I'd offer to
help out with the first two year at a junior college, then base my
further contribution on her performance (read grades, etc) in the
juco.
Truth be told, this is a better strategy with the large universities
anyway. The first two years of the big universities are designed to
"weed out" "no-performing" students. A juco is designed for you to
succeed the first two years. Many students end up wasting a lot of
tuition $$ to go the the big school, flunk out, then got to a smaller
college or a juco for a year or two at least before returning to the
big university.
fred();
|
209.12 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Apr 30 1996 09:54 | 12 |
|
What's wrong with saying how much you will give towards college,
say a state university rate, and that if they want to take on
after college debt, that that's their choice? It makes it a
shared responsibility and is good training for life.
justme....jacqui
p.s. Worked well with both my kids...college grads '86 and '89!!
Both have own homes and jobs.
|
209.13 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Apr 30 1996 11:18 | 4 |
| Nothing wrong with it, but the courts have their own rules for divorced
parents.
Steve
|
209.14 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Apr 30 1996 13:42 | 19 |
| It becomes out of control when neither parent have a college education,
and now DOR/DCYS become instrumental in making it happen. What of both
parents putting it away. It always seems the walking wallet has to foot
a bill that can be abused.
I have a co-worker who is footing the bill
for his daughters college ed. And the ex is also using it to fund her
education. They take turns going to college one on, one off term.
Sounds real fair... but they are able to slip it to the system, and
again take advantage of the walking wallets.
It will be me who will foot the bill for my daughters education, as my
ex will take her vacations, have a dam good time, and I will do working
vacations, stock money away. And pray that our daughters grades are
good enough for scolarships and such.
Then again, women need men like fish need bicycles.....
|
209.15 | | MTVIEW::JOHN | | Thu May 02 1996 18:39 | 28 |
| re: .12
> What's wrong with saying how much you will give towards college,
> say a state university rate
> ...
Sounds good. She finally got a job a couple of weeks ago. I think
it finally dawned on her that I meant it when I said
"If you don't get a job, then no driver training. It costs 1000.00 out
here in California"
She waited two years expecting me to buy a car, pay her insurance and
give her driver training all the while I said get a job or walk.
I still think she thinks everything is magic and the college money will
just drop from the sky and be taken care of.
oh well.
we have concidered having me give her a loan for the money, since I
am just the step-dad.
Andrew
PS. Yes I know I should not just ramble, but it has been 95 out here
for the last couple of days, so it is hard to get to sleep.
AJ
|
209.16 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri May 03 1996 11:17 | 10 |
| AAah!! Pennies from heaven. Money grows on trees, the streets are paved
with gold and a man giving out gold bricks on the corner so you don't
get any idea of digging em up....
My ex, was making more than me before we had our daughter. I would have
to work overtime to exceed her weekly pay. And afterwards, when she
went back to work. She wanted to become under employed. Hey. Just keep
workin over time...
|