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Laura Rowley Money & Happiness

Laura Rowley, Money & Happiness

What to Expect Before You’re Expecting

by Laura Rowley

Good (141 Ratings)
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Posted on Wednesday, June 10, 2009, 12:00AM

Patrick, 32, and Suzy, 29, have been married for two years. He works in production for a publishing firm; she’s in medical administration. They bought a three-bedroom rambler a year ago in a Seattle suburb, and they’re fixing it up room by room. They’re ready to start a family, but they are daunted by the potential costs.

The couple has made smart financial moves. “Right before the wedding we went to a financial planner who had us lay out goals and help us establish a realistic budget,” says Patrick. They paid off $5,000 in credit card debt and ramped up their retirement savings (Suzy’s employer offers a 5 percent match). They have built up a $6,000 emergency fund -- about one month’s take-home pay. They track their budget using Mint.com and live modestly; the only vacation planned this year is a trip to Chicago to attend a friend’s wedding.

But they are struggling to make progress. Student loans from graduate school eat up $550 a month. The house is more costly than they expected -- everything from utilities to paint supplies. “When something big comes up, we have to take it out of savings,” says Patrick. “Suzy’s car muffler fell off a year ago and we went a year without fixing it, but it got to the point where you couldn’t drive it down the street, it was so loud. It cost $400 to replace, which is not the end of world. But when you can’t squeeze any more out of what you’re making, how do you start a family?”

Parents in Patrick and Suzy’s income bracket ($74,500 and above) will spend an estimated $300,000 raising a child born in 2007 through age 17 – not including college expenses, according to government figures. Add in the academic, athletic, and artistic enrichment that is commonplace in child-rearing today, and those costs can easily triple, according to one estimate.

Yes, Kids Are Expensive

“It’s sort of cold to think about kids in this financial sense, but it is a reality of modern life: It’s expensive to raise kids,” says Charles Farrell, attorney and financial planner with Northstar Financial Advisors in Denver. “One of the leading causes of divorce is financial stress and disagreement. They need to really be up to the challenge, or they may find that a situation they thought would enhance their marriage might create some serious problems.”

While every family budget is different, middle-income parents should expect costs for food, clothing, and other basic living expenses to rise about 20 percent to support two children in a household, says Farrell. The best way to prepare is to earmark one income to cover necessities and the other for discretionary costs such as cable, dining out, and vacations. Budget-minded parents can save at least half on necessities such as cribs and strollers by searching craigslist or handmedowns.com, a classified ad site for parents.

“They have to consider how they will get through a financially challenging period if one of them loses their job,” says Farrell. “If the funds are that tight, a short period of unemployment for just one of them may threaten their basic financial stability.”

In addition, they must grapple with the biggest expense -- daycare. Neither Patrick nor Suzy have family in the state to help out; her employer offers a daycare center that costs $1,300 a month. That’s roughly in line with national averages: Fees in licensed centers averaged $14,647 a year for infants in 2007, according to a study by the National Association of Child Care Resources and Referral Agencies. Annual child care costs now surpass the cost of food in every region of the U.S.

The Costs of Health Care, College

Health care costs could also increase. While Suzy has excellent coverage through her employer, she should research how the cost of her policy, co-pays, and deductibles would change if they added a child, says Farrell.  
 
Then there’s planning for the future -- specifically college savings. “If they want to fund a college education for their kids, the numbers are sobering,” says Farrell. “If you consider a basic, in-state tuition of say $15,000 a year, with education inflation running at a conservative assumption of 5 percent, and your investments returning 7 percent over 18 years, you would need to save about $300 per month per child.” Parents can open a 529 college savings plan in one of their names before a child is born and then simply switch the beneficiary. Check out your state plan first, which may offer a tax deduction. 

All of those expenses worry Patrick: “As much as we spend what we earn, we’re not buying DVDs and big screen TVs that people our age blow all their money on.”

What they are likely blowing their money on is simply a higher cost of living. For example, the authors of the recent book Spend ‘Til the End note that Cedar Rapids, Iowa, which has the cultural offerings of a major university (University of Iowa), provides a 78.4 percent higher standard of living than Seattle. The median home price in Seattle is more than twice the national average.

They love the town; as Suzy says, “The city, the landscape -- we go hiking, we love to go out and explore areas -- it’s perfect.”

But getting attached to a major city can be a life-altering experience. I am raising my three children just outside New York, and my family is in Chicago. My kids are growing up spending just a week or two a year with their grandmother and cousins. The older I get, the more painful that reality becomes.

The truth is that, after you have kids, you spend a lot less time exploring city culture and nightlife and a lot more playing with blocks on the floor and kicking balls around the park. It’s worth thinking deeply about moving to a smaller city -- ideally close to family -- if the job opportunities are equal. Smaller towns also typically mean shorter commutes, something that becomes critical when you have kids.  Patrick, for example, travels an hour and a half each way to his position at a publishing company; Suzy walks to the bus and has a 45-minute trip to and from the office.

The couple has no plans to move for now, but they are exploring ways to boost their income before they take the plunge into parenthood. Says Patrick, “Suzy and I have always talked about how you can’t have it all -- you have to figure out where the compromise is going to come.”

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82 Comments

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  • Jim - Wednesday, June 24, 2009, 1:59PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Married for two years, bought a house, now want a child. Welcome to the unrealistic reality that so many couples fall victim to. Get married ASAP, buy a house ASAP, and have a child ASAP. Do not stop and consider IF you want to be a parent, IF you can afford to provide for your child AND save for your own future and retirement. We are living in paradoxical worlds, one that says live it up, spend like mad, who cares what tomorrow brings and the other that says follow the social norm's of decades past. These two situations do not fit together and neither are practical in today's new world. Here is the ugly honest truth that the author can not say as she would like to retain her job - MOST of us should not and can not afford to have kids. The same way we feel entitled to own a home instead of rent, own a fancy car instead of a practical vehicle or the bus, etc. we feel even more entitled to have children. If you can not save enough money monthly for your emergency fund (crucial in today world) or toward your retirement (do you really want to work into your 70's) or afford health care ( hello!) you really should not have a child. Bottom line ugly truth.

  • JeromyJ - Wednesday, June 24, 2009, 10:34AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Yet again - the media makes an example of a couple that has take home pay of $6,000/month or $72,000/year. If you can't afford a house and the bills associated with it - rent. The sense of entitlement in this country is absurd. Our grandparents worked three jobs and lived in apartments while stretching everything to the limit. Don't tell me it was a different time and things cost more. Luxury items cost more. Does this couple have a flat panel in their new home? $100/month Cable and ISP bills? Do they eat out frequently? I mean - the bottom line is budget and deny yourself. Be disciplined and be smart. When you do that - you will be fine. My wife and I were approved for a first mortgage of $450,000 last year on one salary. Naturally we got a $280,000 mortgage and while we don't have the giant brick front with flat panels everywhere - we wake up very peaceful everyday and save and live comfortably. Choices and contentment. Ex: Be content in a $10 golf shirt from KOHL's and not the $50 Under Armor shirt. It's just a shirt. :)

  • Ripped off - Thursday, June 18, 2009, 9:58PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I think this article makes perfect sense. Unless you are on welfare, you need to be aware that having a child is a big responsibilty. Someone mentioned, that they are able to raise their children for $100 each. That must not be in a metropolitan city. Diapers and baby food alone will equal $100. Unless you plan to breastfeed your children until they are 5. What about clothes and daycare? What do you do when you are at work earning the $200 to care for your children? I grew up on welfare and worked hard to ensure that my children are well provided for. Each of them has attended pre-school and are enrolled in a private school. I contribute to their 529 plans and also fully fund our 401k plans. We were able to purchase a 4 bedroom 4 bathroom house with a small yard for them to grow up in. We are not rich by any means, but we make a lot of sacifices for our children. Most of their clothing and toys are hand me downs from thier cousins. My 5 year old daughter is already saving on her own for college. She has more money in her 529 plan than the average American has in their savings account. She would rather put a quarter in her piggy bank than buy a piece of candy.It all depends on what kind of lifestyle you want for your children. I do not agree with people on welfare having 6 children. Why, am I paying for them to have children, when I can barely afford to pay for my own?

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Thursday, June 18, 2009, 2:41PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Having read most of the postings, I see that there are two camps: 1) kids cost lots of money and 2) kids don’t (significantly) cost money. The truth is somewhere in between. Of course, kids cost money. To say otherwise is unrealistic. How little or how much depends on many factors—lifestyle, geography…etc. Everything costs money these days, but using a ‘having no children or having too many children’ as a metric to measure one’s financial well-being is both irrational and irresponsible. There are people who do not have children yet living paycheck-by-paycheck, with debts up to their eyeballs. And then there are people who have five, six children or more that are doing fine with 70K annual gross income. There are endless of examples from both ends. Children will certainly have an impact on one’s life, no doubts. And it isn’t just money but everything else that goes with it—career, personal health, lifestyle...At the end of the day, however, it is the adults that are the decision makers, the ones who are responsible for their own finances, not the children. Of course, it is always healthy and never a bad thing to talk about money when one plans to have children. Money is an important issue, but it shouldn’t be the only reason in deciding whether to have children. More important than money is the mental and emotional health and readiness aspect of this subject. It is a prelude to building a strong foundation of inner personal strength, loving relationships, and family support. All else comes second, including money.

  • Ian - Thursday, June 18, 2009, 1:05PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Time is more important than money. You can spend time with your kids or spend your time earning money. Therein lies the rub. Almost no one has unlimited money. No one has unlimited time. To have kids you need to NOT value money, you need to value your kids. If you're not going to see your kids because you will be working all the time to fund them, you should reconsider. Otherwise you should forget about material things and spend time with your kids. Then focus on getting them the best free education.

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