Investing in your Child's Education
The cost of
higher education is on the rise and it does not appear to be
leveling off any time in the future. It is a good idea to start
Investing in your Child's Education as soon as
possible. College tuition can be a nightmare for many middle income
families. Middle income families often make too much money to get
student loans and state grants but many of these same families
cannot afford to pay for all of their child’s college tuition.
Investing in your child’s education early on is a good way to
insure that there will be some funds for the daunting college
bills. The sooner you start the easier it is to allow for that
extra investing.
Even those of us who are from families that qualified for
student loans often find ourselves in way over our heads in debt
six months after we graduate. Some people never consider Investing
in your child's education. I was one of five children and it was a
struggle just to pay the bills. There was no money left over to
invest. I easily qualified for student loans but I never thought
that I would still be paying on them fourteen years later with no
end to the payments in the near future.
I chose to start investing in my daughter’s education once I
found out I was pregnant. I started an account with U Promise, a
site that is affiliated with a number of retail and grocery stores
as well as products. I assigned our credit cards to the account.
I added our grocery discount cards to the account and I started to
actively purchase products affiliated with U Promise. My daughter
had a small college fund before she had a name. After she was born,
I put the U Promise account in her name.
I also started a savings account as a way of investing in my
daughter’s college tuition. This traditional method of investing
gains a small return in interest, but it is safe and steady. I also
plan to use the investing strategy to encourage my daughter to
develop a work ethic. She will earn money from chores and add part
of the money to her savings account.
I do favor using a savings account for investing over a program
like U Promise. It is easy to make unnecessary purchases and it is
easy to buy more expensive products just to get a few cents into
your U Promise account. For example, I can buy Tide at my local
discount store for about half the price that it is offered at my
local grocery store. I have to choose between paying cash at the discount store with
no credit on the education investment account and buying the
product at the grocery store for credit.
I figure that Tide offers only one percent of the purchase to
the account. If I spent twenty dollars on the product, I only am
investing two cents. I can save between five and ten dollars on
that same purchase by going to the discount store. I would rather
put the extra funds directly into my daughter’s savings account.
With a little thought and a lot of planning, I hope that my
daughter has a worry-free college career. Investing early will give
your children the same chance.
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