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A Fathers Dilemma: Can We Help Our Children, Without Crippling Them?

 
Author: Jon Hanson

Breakdown in the Becky Lane!

I'd just sat down at my office away from home, the local Panera, when another regular customer, Harold, sidled up to my table. We'd chatted a number of times before, and he was intrigued by my title of Financial Sanity Coach and knew I had been working on my book, "Good Debt, Bad Debt" (Penguin-Portfolio,Jan. 2005) at this very table for the past year. Today he sought my advice on a weighty matter.

"Jon, I am thinking of buying a car for my daughter," Harold confessed. I didn't need to hear any more to know what was coming next. And when I did hear the whole story, I didn't know whether to feel sorrier for the daughter or the father. Apparently, Becky had been working for three years and had succeeded in saving an amount roughly equal to one eighth of the tip I'd left at the counter. Now Dad was about to reward her excellent saving behavior by buying her a car.

Unbeknownst to Harold, he was about to initiate a life-long process that Stanley and Danko, authors of The Millionaire Next Door, call "economic outpatient care." There's only one cure, as I advocate in my own book, Good Debt, Bad Debt : crimp the cash flow, now. If this sounds like "tough love," it is, and for good reason: kids who can't save a good chunk of their income are destined to become financially challenged when they finally do leave the nest.

Sadly, even with a big jump in salary, most young people continue to spend like they did when their parents were footing everything, from essentials to lifestyle extras. Their "metabolic spending set points" work against them when its time for them to pay ALL their expenses.

To explain the problem, I gave Harold the following example: "If you're living at home and make $200 a week and spend it all, there are no immediate consequences. Suppose you spend all $200 on going to the mall, eating out, concerts and clothes? No problem. Mom and dad cover the serious stuff. But once you start living independently, even if your salary starts at $1,000 a week, there's a problem with spending $200 a week on fluff. For starters, taxes are higher; total housing expenses will be about 36 percent of salary and has, for 23 years kept pace with income. Suppose housing expense (rent/mortgage/utilities/taxes) chew up 36 percent, taxes take 28 percent, and your lifestyle choices cost 20 percent of salary. This leaves less than 14 percent of income for everything else: food, transportation, retirement, etc. That aint much...."

Harold nodded as I went through my example. I could see by his body language that this was a painful topic for him. "Hey, it's natural to want to do nice things for your kids," I said to assuage his guilt a bit. "The problem is finding a way we can give that doesn't cripple the ambition and thinking of the recipient."

I also explained the plan I've been using in my own home. Here's how it works. My wife and I allow our kids to spend only 50 percent (40 net) of the money they get from small jobs and gifts; the other 50 percent must be saved. When my 13 year old son had a job helping a neighbor insert ads for a commercial paper route, he was earning $20 a week. He would bank $10, tithe $2, and use the remaining $8 for games, books, or special treats. Several times when he wanted a $40 Nintendo game, he understood it could take five weeks to save the money. Often, he would strive to come up with special jobs around the house to earn the money faster. This plan seems to work pretty well -- it provides enough cash to generate some immediate benefits, while enabling my son to experience the pleasure of watching his savings grow. So far he hasn't complained one iota.

Harold's eyes widened as I described how the 50-percent plan works in my household. I could see that the gears were turning. This was the time to make my real point. "Harold," I said, "You're obviously a successful guy and you got to be that way by exercising good judgement and fiscal diligence. Don't you want to pass on those qualities and skills to your daughter?" Harold raised his his Rolex clad wrist in front of his chin and thought for a moment."Maybe Becky would be better off it we didn't pay for everything," he admitted. "I'm gonna give this some thought."

Apparently, it wasn't a whole lot of thought. About two weeks later I looked up from my perch at the bakery and saw Becky and her dad driving by in a new Camry Solara convertible. Oh well, the road to fiscal hell is sometimes paved with good intentions. Maybe Harold will remember the first mile of his descent when he's still paying for Becky's car repairs twenty years down the pike.

Copyright 2004 Jon Hanson www.gooddebt.com

Note: This content is availble for free use on your website or e-zine, or print based so long as it is, used in its entirety and is not altered and my name, copyright notice and URL appear in the article. Or Jon Hanson for interview jon@gooddebt.com Thanks. Jon

Author Bio:

Jon Hanson

Jon often jokes, ?I began writing as a way to purge my sarcasm gland.? Many of the articles and press releases Hanson sends out employ humor and sarcasm. Also if you haven?t visited gooddebt.com you should do so. Check out the songs, comedy, and news parody video (WMV) called DNN,Debt News Network.

Hanson?s Songs Include: 1. The 12 Daze of Debtmas 1:30 ? 2004 Jon Hanson 2. Chargin? USA Copyright ? 2004 Jon Hanson, (Surfin' USA, Chuck Berry) BMI-Isalee Music & Arc Music 2:53 3. Debt Ridden Downs ? 2004 Jon Hanson (Horse Race of Financial Emotions) Comedy 2:07

Hanson also has a serious side and is working on two kids books and 50 percent of the proceeds will go to Out of the Rain Society to fund Autism Reseach. Hanson has partnered up with a brilliant illustrator Amy Sellers of Apopka, Florida (Hanson lives near Columbus, Ohio).

About Jon Hanson

A 25-year veteran and student of the real estate business and now a full-time author and speaker on topics of personal finance, Jon Hanson talks from the heart ? literally; he barely survived his own ?near-debt experience? a few years ago and used the lessons he learned to mine a deeper joy out of the dysfunctional monetary habits and attitudes that nearly cost him his life. Stressed, demoralized, nearly $100,000 in debt to the IRS, and suffering severe chest pains, Hanson imagined his own obituary while hooked to a heart monitor at his local emergency room:

?Jon Hanson (41) of Pickerington, Ohio, died Tuesday from complications stemming from lack of discipline, inability to delay gratification, and lack of discernment in financial matters. He showed great promise early in life. Unfortunately, he expired before much could be made of it.?

Fortunately, there's been no need for the obit. Jon has lived on to write Good Debt, Bad Debt which he hopes will spare others from the trauma he experienced while suffering from extreme "debtabetes, and inspire folks to rise above the financial mistakes made by virtually everybody in today's immediate-gratification consumer culture.

Prior to devoting himself to writing and speaking on the dangers of Debtabetes and other scourges of the land, Jon's full-time business was real estate. Jon has worked almost exclusively with distressed property situations since 1981. In the second half of his real estate career, most of Jon's effort was concentrated on more than 120 foreclosure work-outs, judicial foreclosure of liens, and judgments.

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