Queenroot
I complete the Squar3
Depends on income, debt, mortgage, how many kids and a lot of other factorshow hard is it to set aside 30 grand over 20 years. it's called planning for your kids' future.
Depends on income, debt, mortgage, how many kids and a lot of other factorshow hard is it to set aside 30 grand over 20 years. it's called planning for your kids' future.
That's not the only cost in raising a child or children....how hard is it to set aside 30 grand over 20 years. it's called planning for your kids' future.
That's laughable , esp when not everyone earns 60k or 80k per annumhow hard is it to set aside 30 grand over 20 years. it's called planning for your kids' future.
really? most people i know all chuck it on HECS. and their parents could easily pay it if they wanted.It struck me today that almost everyone I could think of have/had their parents paying/paid their fees up front for them so they don't have any HECS debt. For me I have to pay my own way and have to work for everything I get. Curious as to how many people on here don't have a HECs debt?
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure HECS doesn't have interest (at the moment, at least). AFAIK there's indexing, but no interest.really? most people i know all chuck it on HECS. and their parents could easily pay it if they wanted.
its to do with finance though, HECS is only 2.5% interest so youd be better off putting the money youd pay the fees with in term deposit at say 5% (in the long run) and youd end up better off in say 10-20 years when youve paid off your debt.
its indexed to inflation which averages 2.5%.Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure HECS doesn't have interest (at the moment, at least). AFAIK there's indexing, but no interest.
Yeah, that money would all be gone now if it wasn't put into a special company / program that takes the money. They don't let you take it out unless you've finished year 12, and intend to go to uni. If you don't finish year 12, or go to uni, they keep your money.
I'm talking about the average family for a tertiary attending student (hint: it's mostly middle class kids) not disadvantaged students. What I'm saying you don't have to be "rich" to save money for your kids uni. If you're on a below avg income of even 50k a year you can still put money aside. If you don't drink a coffee for every working day, you'd save around 720 dollars a year. There are methods to budget money no matter your income.That's not the only cost in raising a child or children....
Your suggestion is laughable for a low income family.
You get 10% discount when paying upfront (or is that gone now?) I got 20% discounts in 2011 when paying upfront so you save waaaaay more money. have fun finding a term deposit more than 3.5% these days thoughreally? most people i know all chuck it on HECS. and their parents could easily pay it if they wanted.
its to do with finance though, HECS is only 2.5% interest so youd be better off putting the money youd pay the fees with in term deposit at say 5% (in the long run) and youd end up better off in say 10-20 years when youve paid off your debt.
"Commencing undergraduate domestic students at the University of Sydney are offered Commonwealth supported places (CSPs). A CSP is subsidised by the Commonwealth Government. Some students are required to pay their student contribution upfront while others can choose to pay upfront with a 10% HECS-HELP discount or take out a HECS-HELP loan." -From: http://sydney.edu.au/current_students/student_administration/hecs_fees.shtmlThat's gone.
It's a bit confusing, some people told me there's no discount whatsoever, but others have told me there is a 5% discount.
The average equivalised middle class household disposable income is around $800, and there are 1.6 employed persons so that's $1280 per week (household, not person). The median expenditure per household is around $1236. With at least one child aged 5-14, that increases up to $1670.I'm talking about the average family for a tertiary attending student (hint: it's mostly middle class kids) not disadvantaged students. What I'm saying you don't have to be "rich" to save money for your kids uni. If you're on a below avg income of even 50k a year you can still put money aside. If you don't drink a coffee for every working day, you'd save around 720 dollars a year. There are methods to budget money no matter your income.
Shit I know american families on 40-50k a year household income and they were able to save 60k for their kids college fund.
I know for disadvantaged students it's a completely separate situation and it's not the topic at hand, it's mostly about the notion that you need "rich" parents to pay off uni fees which is top kek.
Changes in fees won't affect your HECS balance as it is essentially a loan to cover your fees as and when they are due. i.e. you have a bill of $4,000 for a semester, and immediately you borrow $4,000 using a HECS loan facility to pay it.Are you saying keep the money in your bank account until your out of uni and until you actually have to start paying it off?
What happens if fees go up second or third semester of university? Do I pay the fees set at the time I enrolled in uni? Or the new ones?
Or what if the fees go up AFTER you've left uni? Your amount you have to pay wouldn't change would it? If you have it on HECS in both these situations.
With no discount from 2016, I was wondering why anyone would pay it off straight away honestly. Why not let it sit in your bank and gain a bit of interest. However, I wasn't sure about if the fees go up like I said above.
But then if you leave it in your bank account then that could effect things like youth allowance.