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Parents Worry More About Paying

Parents Worry More About Paying
For College Than Retirement, Survey Shows

NEW YORK

All those reports about the rising cost of a college education appear to be having an impact on the savings patterns of American families.
A survey finds that parents with children under age 18 are more concerned about saving for their children’s educations than they are about saving for their own retirement.

The study was commissioned by The Vanguard Group mutual fund company and Upromise Investments Inc., which channels shopping rebates into educational savings accounts.

The survey found that 37 percent of the more than 1,100 parents interviewed said saving for college was of primary concern, compared with 34 percent who said retirement was their top financial concern. Most of the remaining 29 percent said saving for a house, car or other major purchase was most important.

Interestingly, more families with children under age 12 were saving for college — 64 percent — compared with families with children aged 12 to 17, where the rate was 59 percent, the study found. And 30 percent of families with younger children said grandparents and other relatives were helping them to save, compared with 25 percent of families with older children.

John C. Heywood, a principal of Vanguard’s education markets group, says he suspected parents were motivated by surging college costs.
“I believe people are recognizing the increasing costs of college and starting to save earlier,” he says.

The cost of sending children to college has been rising rapidly in recent years. According to the latest survey from the College Board, a nonprofit association based in Washington, D.C., tuition and fees at four-year private institutions rose nearly 6 percent to $21,235 for the 2005-2006 academic year from $20,045 in 2004-2005, while costs at four-year public institutions went up more than 7 percent to $5,491 from $5,126.

Most financial advisers urge families to save first for their own retirement and then put money aside for their children’s education, arguing that families can borrow to fund college but not retirement. But Heywood says this often conflicts with parents’ aspirations for their children.

“People hear that and they say, ‘Too bad about retirement savings; my kids are going to college,’” he says. For young families especially, “retirement is farther off than the kids going to college, so there’s less urgency.”

The families who have started saving for their children’s college educations have set aside about $4,700 per child so far, the study found.

About four out of 10 families surveyed were familiar with the Section 529 college savings plans, which are tax-favored programs set up by states to help families save for college. Savings in 529 plans grow tax-deferred, and withdrawals are tax-free when used for education.

Vanguard manages Section 529 programs in New York, Iowa, Nevada and Colorado, and provides fund options in 14 states. Upromise can channel family contributions into 529 plans.

Associated Press



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