I'm the PP you're responding to. I agree with you sort of. Until a year ago, I would have said only get loans if you are going to major in Engineering, CS, Math, a for sure Pre-Med genius (no risk of washing out), Nursing, and a very few other majors. But now with Trump tanking the economy and AI, is even Engineering/CS going to pay off? For some yes, but I'm sensing there's dark clouds on the horizon for this field. To the point of considering is there a way to minimize the loans by 2 years at Community College? Can you minimize living expenses by living at home and only taking on tuition debt? Can you work during the semester to minimize loans needed? Majoring in Biology and Chemistry has not seemed to pay off in terms of considering student loans for over a decade, from all the friends of my kids who are ages 27-35. Today I had lunch at a local private college (they let the public dine for $6). They were showing the recent graduates who were offered jobs. One guy just graduated with a degree in Chemistry and took a job doing activities for an after-school Boys and Girls Club. I *know* that doesn't pay much. I was a CS major and worked my career with aerospace and other engineers. We were paid well and it was my ticket out of poverty too. But with no $$, I did it by going to community college, living at home and going to the state school (which at the time was beating MIT in computer contests) and working 20-30 hrs/week, while triple majoring in CS, Math and Statistics. I don't know if 25hrs of work nowadays would cover tuition, but it just seems so risky borrowing $40K or more a year with the current STEM outlook. Never mind $40K a year for Communications major. And I know 40K is on the low side for many schools that are probably $60K or more? Students from generational wealthy families that have connections will probably always find a job through family, friends of the parents and help sliding into an internship. But for those of us starting from zero, is it worth having student loans almost as big as a mortgage? My son graduated 10 years ago in CS and is making great money. I know he's well over 200K, maybe 300K. But I'm hearing some worry in his voice about the future of the industry, and how difficult it will be to replace his job should he get laid off. My daughter just finished 10 years to be a psychologist with with veterans with traumatic brain injuries. After her internship, she should make 100K to start. But she will have around $400K in student loans. Ouch! And then all the kids who take student loans for a year or two and flag out, need to help family back home, or life just gets in the way. Now they have student loans and no degree to get a professional job. Really sad for them. So I get you, and for academic go-getters like us in lucrative majors, they are probably safe getting loans if that's the only way to get through college. I sure hope this is still true. |
Hi ChatGPT! |
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Hi OP!
If you will post your specific financial situation, you can get some very good advice here, for free. You are still mid-career. It is not too late to create financial stability. Wealth may not be a likely option, and I do not recommend you chase it. But you can aim to have a secure retirement. What are your details? Current income(s)? What type of jobs and how long can you realistically work at them? (Someone who has a physically demanding job will have a hard time working as they get older. A desk job is much easier on the body.) Do you have pensions? If so, what can you expect when you retire? Have you both been contributing to Social Security? Are you home owners? If so, value of house and equity. Are you in debt? What savings do you have so far? |
My immediate thoughts are: - spouse in low paying job needs to step it up more. Try to find a better paying job. - be SMART about college. You simply MUST NOT take any debt. Let your kids know, NOW, so their expectations are set. Kids themselves can borrow about $5,000 a year if that will make a difference in what you can afford. But if you don't have much saved for them or for retirement, you simply cannot afford to spend for your kids to go to college. There are ways for them to still get a 4 year college degree without spending much money. They are not nice, fun ways. They may involve living at home for example. Or kids taking a gap year and working the year after college to save up a year of tuition. DO NOT take on any debt for college. - Financial Advice: I would contact a reputable Fee Only financial advisor who will talk with you without selling you anything. Moderate income people can just speak with someone for a couple of hours. It might be the best thing for you - to see what you should be doing now. Make sure that they are a fiduciary. I have worked with this company that gets good reviews: https://hellonectarine.com |
| I came to this country in my 30s, went thru divorce, never built weath either. Secured a rent controlled (affordable housing) unit in an area with easy access to jobs, which will come in handy for my kid when he is older. My income after 65 will allow me to be on Medicaid which not only means free medicine but paid caregiving hours to help with my daily living. There are different ways to build wealth. |
You made excellent points. The issue is that our education system is preparing for jobs and careers as if we were still in the 90s. A degree in STEM is not going to be the ticket to a high paying career that a lot of people think it will be. In fact a lot of people who graduate in STEM will never work in STEM. The capitalist system wants to pick the best candidate out of 100 than out of 5 because it keeps wages from spiraling out of control. In fact for someone who wants to be an engineer and doesn't have family money the cheapest and frankly great route is community college and then 4 years. I think there is a culture of prestige in this country that's hurtful everyone. Some parents will go into extreme debt just so their kid went to say Georgia Tech as opposed to the local community college. |
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My husband, who was a war refugee as a child, lived poorly all through his 20s and early 30s because he invested in the stock market instead of moving out of a poor neighborhood, buying better food, or a car, or nice clothes, or buy stuff.
Now, thanks to him, we have more than 10M. At no point did he invest large sums, because he never had large sums: his salary at the time did not exceed 30K a year, if that. Now our HHI is 120-150K a year. We have two children, born in a one-bedroom apartment. When they were little, we would only buy food on sale. We bought our first basic compact car to drive DC1 home from the hospital. We still have that car 20 years later. We do splurge on certain things that are important to us, like education, but that's after decades of belt-tightening, living with extreme frugality and realizing we can simply sell stock to pay for private university. I have posted multiple times over the years on DCUM, trying to explain to people that investing in the stock market or in real estate is possible at most income levels, even very low ones, but that it takes thought and very real sacrifice. Frankly, most Americans are not prepared to make those sacrifices. You cannot live a middle class lifestyle if you seriously want to invest and your salary is low. You cannot invest in real estate in expensive areas. You need to pick a neighborhood you hope will gentrify, and renovate it yourself, like my friend did. It's less work, if you're really poor, to buy stocks like my husband did. All these methods usually only bear fruit over multiple decades, which is why it's very important to start young. The point is that you should not expect your salary to make you rich. OP, you can still give it a try if you want. You have several decades left. |
No American can handle that kind of hardship |
LOL. Lots of us live this kind of life. We just aren't usually posting on DCUM Financial Forum. OP probably also is living a fairly frugal lifestyle; just likely didn't manage to save much in investments. At age 50, it isn't too late. But it would help if both spouses were working and in jobs with pensions or a 401k plan with a match. Sure, best to start saving in your 20s, but even in your 50s, it isn't too late to save more for a secure retirement so you aren't a burden on your children. |
I wish you the best but I would be careful relying on the government to provide you free medical care and help with daily living. people that work in government or for the government many times are not accountable or don't care about their performance. I would rather have $$ and pay for services. |
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“I’m a loser, Baby” - Beck
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=tSWyNgXeyqA Essentially most of GenX was wiped out by dot.com and GFC. We had a lost decade of stocks, so we essentially started from same place Millenials (who did have a rough job market for a hot minute, but then the best job market in history). But, for GenX, we were older after GFC, so we had to invest more conservatively and the hot tech jobs weren’t hiring us because we were “over 30” (thanks Zuck!). The only redeeming factor would be if you bought a house before the housing bubble (before 1998 or so) AND didn’t lose it in foreclosure or have to sell when it was underwater AND lived in a place that appreciated you made some solid gains and had lower COL by having a smaller mortgage. But the huge outsize returns in stocks, crypto etc were rewarded to those who could take more risk, which at that point the wisdom was that you shouldn’t. And you weren’t getting those BigTech jobs by and large. But no one talks about GenX, so you feel like it’s only you. They ALWAYS talk about Boomers, Millennials, and Gen Z — never X. |
I lived like a student for the first 5 years of big law and saved as much as I could. The fact is, the money you save in your 20s is worth so much more than the money you save in your 50s. It's the magic of compound interest. |
To get to 10M on normal income he was speculating not investing. |
We do not have generational wealth since we are first gen immigrants to USA. Our kids have got STEM degrees, no student debt because they went to in-state flagships, and if need be they will stay at home (we are in DMV) while working to save on rent. Heck, it may be that they continue living with us even after they get married because just plain living will be difficult for middle class people. |