January 27, 2010 1:25 PM
- Text
Keep College From Breaking The Bank
(CBS)
In many ways, college is the beginning of many a young person's financial life. For the first time, kids have the opportunity to manage their money with little guidance from Mom and Dad.
This can be great, or can turn into a financial disaster.
College can also wind up being a big financial burden for parents since most parents pay for part, or all, of the experience.
But, said financial author and radio host Dave Ramsey on The Early Show Tuesday, there are ways to keep it from being any more expensive than it has to be, namely, by avoiding four common miscues of parents and kids alike.
#1: HAVING NO FINANCIAL KNOWLEDGE
The first place parents go wrong is failing to give their kids a financial education. Nobody's going to learn how to manage money by osmosis; it's a skill just like learning to cook or writing a good term paper. Of course, the big reason many parents don't teach their kids about money is that nobody ever taught them! It's really a vicious cycle in that way.
It's never too late to teach your kids some financial sense. Freshman or senior, leaving for school next week or next year, there's still time to educate.
If you've never had a financial "how to" conversation with your child, knowing where to begin can be overwhelming. There are three topics Ramsey says all kids should know before heading off to school:
1. How to balance a checkbook
2. How to construct a simple, one-page budget
3. How and why to avoid credit cards
#2: SIGNING UP FOR CREDIT CARDS
It's no secret that college students get into a lot of trouble with credit cards. Statistics show that students are offered eight credit cards their first week at school! By the end of their freshman year, 80 percent of students have at least one card.
As Ramsey says, "Students are trading in their financial soul for a free hat."
Of course, once a student has a card, he or she uses it, and that's where the trouble begins.
Students tend to charge themselves into a frenzy, and then don't have the means to pay the bills.
Ramsey recently spoke to a college guidance counselor who told him that more and more students are actually dropping out of school so they can work and pay off credit card tabs.
Ramsey's stand on credit cards is clear: Nobody should have one, nobody should use one.
Society makes us believe we need credit cards, but we don't. Parents and students both should use debit cards, checks or cash. This insures that you're only spending money you actually have.
"Credit cards and cell phones are like badges of adulthood," Ramsey says, "and parents really have to work to explain to their kids why using a credit card is a bad thing.
The average student graduates with close to $3,000 in credit card debt; there's no reason for young adults to start off their lives in debt like that.
This can be great, or can turn into a financial disaster.
College can also wind up being a big financial burden for parents since most parents pay for part, or all, of the experience.
But, said financial author and radio host Dave Ramsey on The Early Show Tuesday, there are ways to keep it from being any more expensive than it has to be, namely, by avoiding four common miscues of parents and kids alike.
#1: HAVING NO FINANCIAL KNOWLEDGE
The first place parents go wrong is failing to give their kids a financial education. Nobody's going to learn how to manage money by osmosis; it's a skill just like learning to cook or writing a good term paper. Of course, the big reason many parents don't teach their kids about money is that nobody ever taught them! It's really a vicious cycle in that way.
It's never too late to teach your kids some financial sense. Freshman or senior, leaving for school next week or next year, there's still time to educate.
If you've never had a financial "how to" conversation with your child, knowing where to begin can be overwhelming. There are three topics Ramsey says all kids should know before heading off to school:
1. How to balance a checkbook
2. How to construct a simple, one-page budget
3. How and why to avoid credit cards
#2: SIGNING UP FOR CREDIT CARDS
It's no secret that college students get into a lot of trouble with credit cards. Statistics show that students are offered eight credit cards their first week at school! By the end of their freshman year, 80 percent of students have at least one card.
As Ramsey says, "Students are trading in their financial soul for a free hat."
Of course, once a student has a card, he or she uses it, and that's where the trouble begins.
Students tend to charge themselves into a frenzy, and then don't have the means to pay the bills.
Ramsey recently spoke to a college guidance counselor who told him that more and more students are actually dropping out of school so they can work and pay off credit card tabs.
Ramsey's stand on credit cards is clear: Nobody should have one, nobody should use one.
Society makes us believe we need credit cards, but we don't. Parents and students both should use debit cards, checks or cash. This insures that you're only spending money you actually have.
"Credit cards and cell phones are like badges of adulthood," Ramsey says, "and parents really have to work to explain to their kids why using a credit card is a bad thing.
The average student graduates with close to $3,000 in credit card debt; there's no reason for young adults to start off their lives in debt like that.
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