Showing posts with label children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Government Sponsored Leveraged Equity Bets...On College??

I've explained before why I think 529 Plans should go away.  They only benefit the very wealthy, and probably they feed the ever increasing costs of college education. 

Melissa Bean of Illinois, has introduced HR5030, which seeks to allow the use of 529 Plan assets to cover student loan interest payments.  From her website:
"With one daughter in college and another to follow, I keenly understand the financial challenges parents face to fund college education,” Bean said. “This bill allows those who’ve saved in 529 accounts and played by the rules to allow their investments to recover before using them to finance those costs."
This bill reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of just about every aspect of finance, from investing through tax.

Let's make this very simple.  Bean bought a risky portfolio to save, tax free, for her daughters' college costs.  This portfolio went south. 

H.R. 5030 would allow her to use the risky plan assets to finance student loan debt, not just direct educational expense.  If she were a Goldman instead of a Bean, we'd call this proprietary trading

She believes she can invest her 529 Plan assets in such a way as to earn a spread above the borrowing rate on student loans.  That's a bold assumption.

We could just stop there.  Why should the government encourage more leveraged risky bets than they already encourage? 

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Bank of Dad sets interest rate policy tomorrow

As an "economist" by training, (in quotes because I've never been a practicing economist,) I find dealing with my kids and money uniquely difficult: I want to encourage them to understand the semi-reality that is modern finance, and I want to properly educate them (read "train") about personal finance and their own behavior.

My son justed turned seven. He received a check from my father-in-law. He knows the check isn't money. He knows it can be exchanged for money at the bank, only if his grandfather actually has the money. His almost 10 year old sister reminds him, however,that the money isn't worth anything unless someone else is willing to give him something for the "worthless piece of paper", her own words that make me very proud!

My kids also have a very complicated spreadsheet we manipulate together that computes their allowances (fixed base-line plus age based component,) allocates the allowance between spendable cash paid in specie, charitable contributions they then select, and their savings at the Bank of Dad. Why the Bank of Dad? I don't see how, even under reasonable interest rate environments, parents can encourage children to save. Their discount rates are too high. (That's my view. Others could simply say they don't understand discounting. I disagree with that, as we shall see.) In the current environment, its hard to see why anyone saves...but then again, that is the point!

Last year the Bank of Dad paid 25% annually compounded weekly. Quite fairly, the kids argued that I cannot change interest rates more than once a year. They did not want me to arbitrarily move rates to manipulate short term behavior. Ironic that a six and nine year old figure that out!

We also agreed that the BofD is only required to pay the guaranteed rate on balances below $100.

For this year, I think I'll keep rates on deposits constant. However, I may issue some risky securities. My other thought is to allow them to have non-dollar deposits. There's a reasonable chance we'll go to Israel next year, and on vacation we typically give fixed per diem allowances to avoid the "can I have" syndrome. Seems completely logical to offer them the ability to manage their future currency risk.

Teaching them about the use of credit works equally well. They rarely carry cash. They know unplanned, spontaneous purchases have a higher cost. How? I charge them small fees. Running into Rite Aid to pick up medicine, and someone wants that $0.99 candy? Well, it's going to cost $1.20 or $1.25 after sales tax and the fee to borrow money from Dad for a few hours. No, that is NOT usury. That is a transaction fee combined with an interest free loan...just ask BofA!

Bottom line: I certainly fit many of the stereotypes of this article!