
You can help your
children financially in many ways, even after they are well into their
adult years—and most of those ways don’t involve giving them money.
Here are a handful of
tips from CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ practitioners about how to make
your children’s financial lives a little easier, often in ways you might
not expect.
Teach them good money
management skills and money values. Sure, you can donate cash to their
savings account, EE bonds in their name, or shares of stock or mutual
funds. But the gift that really keeps on giving their entire lifetime is
a sound financial education backed by the demonstration of your sound
money values.
If you’re unsure of how
well you can do this yourself, have them work with your CFP® financial
planner. Also give them money management material designed for children
of different ages and have them take classes geared toward their ages.
They need to learn such financial skills as budgeting, investing,
retirement planning, insurance, taxes, charitable giving, how to read a
pay stub and balance a checkbook, and what role money should play in
their lives.
They may never thank
you for this gift, but these skills and values will likely earn them far
more money, and make better use of that money, than all the monetary
gifts you ever make to them.
Set a good example. You
can teach them the best money management skills in the world, but if you
don’t exemplify good money management judgment yourself, they probably
won’t either.
Open an IRA. Okay,
okay, this involves giving them cold cash. But think of it as seed
money, pump-priming money, a chance to reinforce the message that they
will likely have to fund most or all of their retirement, as employer
pensions are disappearing and Social Security may only provide minimal
help.
When they first start
earning taxable income from outside jobs or even from household chores
such as mowing the lawn, have them open an individual retirement
account. Most experts recommend a Roth IRA, which is funded with
after-tax money, because the tax-savings benefits of a traditional IRA
are minimal for children earning little income. With the Roth, they can
later withdraw the contributions and the earnings tax free.
Explain why they need
an IRA (for that retirement they’ve got to fund, remember). Then match
dollar for dollar whatever amount they can realistically invest in it
(your combined contributions can’t exceed their earned income for the
year or the 2005 maximum of $4,000, whichever is smaller).
Take care of your own
retirement. Fund your retirement even if it means your children have to
pay their own way through college. They can get loans or go to a less
expensive school. There’s no financial aid for retirement if you fail to
save enough, and you want to avoid asking them for handouts in your old
age.
Don’t be a financial
burden on them. This means not only making sure your retirement is
properly funded, but that you can pay for medical care and possibly
long-term care—two huge expenses during retirement many people overlook.
Review your medical coverage, including possible retiree health
benefits, Medigap insurance once you start Medicare, and long-term care
insurance. Spare your children the financial burden of having to
financially assist you at a time they’re probably trying to save for
their own retirement and put your grandchildren through college.
Have an estate plan in
place. Basics include a will, a financial power of attorney, a living
will, and a health care power of attorney (also known as a health care
proxy). You may or may not need additional planning, such as trusts or a
family limited partnership, but those four basic documents will go a
long way in giving your children flexibility and guidance should you
become incapacitated (when powers of attorney become invaluable) or when
you die. An updated estate plan also will ensure that your children
inherit what you wish them to inherit.
Keep your financial
records in order. Give your children a general idea of the value of your
estate and your plans for it, and let them know where they can find
financial documents upon your incapacity or death. This is sensitive
stuff, but it beats leaving them with a financial mess at a stressful,
emotional time.
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April 2005 — This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the
membership organization for the financial planning community.