Originally posted by SkinBasket
<sigh> Ok, you probably should have stayed in the Corporate world longer than 6 years, or you should have majored in a business discipline that lends itself to tax advice.
At 70K a year average being single he doesn't get CLOSE to the figures you're talking about. I used my 2006 tax package (I don't have 2007 set up and populated yet) and his federal taxes average about 13% depending on exemptions & deductions. (Obviously this will be lower in early years). Next he's got to have 7.65% for social security/Medicare and then about 5% for state taxes (Wisconsin averages between 4.6% and 6.5% so pick your poison, I don't care). If you've kept up with me on the math, we are now at 25.65%. So, if you think he's going to average 15% of his income per year on insurance at age 22-30 working for a good company, you've lost your mind.... So, those funds now become available.
Next, you're assuming that he's going to live by himself (doubtful), so if he's married there is a LOT more income, even if his spouse doesn't make what he does.
Also, you're assuming he's going to work 40 hours, head home and hit the forum, stay on all night, and then do it again the next day. Maybe, maybe not. If he does, yes it may take longer. That's HIS choice and the answer depends on how much he want to "win".
He could take on a roommate earning a rental income in his condo, he could deliver pizzas a couple nights a week, or sell things on ebay.... Options are limitless and totally dependent upon how fast he wants to win. The choice is his.
It isn't easy, but having no mortgage payments from the time he's 30 and on just MIGHT make it worth it...
Stick to raising kids Skin, it's more suited to your talents. You can't just subject ONE variable to change and hold the rest constant. That works great in Econ class but doesn't do shit in the real world.
Personal finance doesn't work that way. Personal finance is almost totally about behavior. Have you created the lifestyle behaviors that make you win, or not? Trying to make this an intellectual exercise looking at numbers and interest rates doesn't work. It's not a BUSINESS. You cannot treat personal finance as such. This leads to anyalyzing interest rates. Next, you're thinking the annual discover card rebate thing is a great way to make money.... And, it's all downhill from there.
The "average" family makes about $42k per year. That's for a family of FOUR. If you make more than that, yet tailor your lifestyle to that, and don't accumulate debt, you have a good deal of "extra" money available to invest. That takes sacrifice and is not for the faint hearted, nor the cynic, however, that is a valid choice that families can make or NOT make.
My client friend I mentioned earlier, lived in an APARTMENT for 10 years. Cheapest one he could find. All his friends thought he was NUTS. Today, he's grateful for that. At 31 he will NEVER make a mortgage payment again. But it wasn't easy. There is NO free lunch.


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