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Figuring
Out the Financial Aid Formula
Few areas of
financial planning are more complicated for parents
than ensuring that their children will have enough
money to pay for tuition, room, board, books, transportation
and other related expenses. But the payoff - the likelihood
that a good college education will expand their children's
opportunities to enjoy gratifying careers and higher
lifetime incomes - is worth planning for.
What makes
the task so complicated is that, on the average, college
bills have been rising - and continue to rise - faster
than after-tax personal income. Even more challenging,
especially when college is still years away, is the
uncertainty inherent in the never-ending kaleidoscopic
changes among government and college financial aid
programs and relevant federal and state income tax
provisions - not to mention lower real after-tax returns
on savings and investments.
Parents unable
or unwilling to plan until a child is a high school
junior may have to contend with less uncertainty,
but, deprived of the prospects of many years of even
average returns on their savings and investments,
they have the disadvantage of having to cough up a
lot of money out of assets and current income in a
short time.
Those who start
as soon as a baby is brought home from the hospital
may maximize the benefits of compounding interest
or equity returns - even if only at lower rates -
over at least 18 years, but they are aiming at unknowable
targets which even skilled financial planners can't
forecast with certainty. Among them: Will the baby
grow up to be a prospect for Harvard - with its high
costs - a community college, or a vocational school?
In the face
of all the unknowns the best that parents and planners
can do is start with what is known
- such as the year in which the child is expected
to start college - and split the others between the
likely and the unlikely. The year provides not only
the probable period for accumulating asset to meet
college expenses, but also the probability and extent
of other liabilities, including retirement.
In planning
the financing of a child's college education, it may
be helpful for parents to know how the share of the
total cost that they may be required to pay will be
determined by the child's school on the basis of:
- What
they estimate, when filling out the federal student aid
form, to be their "expected family contribution" (EFC),
subsequently converted into an "official" EFC.
- What
the school calculates to be the amount that the family
is expected to pay and the amount of federal student aid
for which the family is eligible, based on school policies
as well as federal law. The calculation takes into consideration
more than easily predictable things such as parents' compensation
and assets. For example:
- Whether a family has other children who will
be going to college - helpful to wealthy as well
as poor families;
- Whether a child is admitted to a high-cost private
university or a state college; or
- Assets in the child's name, which may reduce
financial aid eligibility.
Whatever
the family's share, the rest - for over one-half of
all undergraduate students - comes from financial
aid:
- Federal
programs, which provide two-thirds of all student financial
aid through (a) grants, such as Pell grants, that are
based on need, cost of attendance, and enrollment status,
and (b) direct or guaranteed loans, such as Stafford loans,
on which interest may be deferred until graduation and
may be deductible from taxable income up to $2,500 annually.
The Free Application fr Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is
a great place to start: www.fafsa.ed.gov.
- Loans
and grants from universities and colleges. While most
of their aid is in the form of loans, grants account for
a growing share. Some base their aid on merit as well
as need, which may also be helpful to upper-income families.
- Scholarships
from a large variety of organizations ranging the
alphabet from the American Legion to the YMCA. A
great Web site for scholarship is www.fastweb.com.
Not knowing
years earlier what loan and grant possibilities are
likely to be, it is
essential for
parents to start early to accumulate the family's
share - after determining whether tax law would make
accounts' ownership by the child, parents, or other
relatives more advantageous.
Aside from
conventional taxable and tax-exempt investments, there
are special tax-sheltered vehicles, such as 529 Plans
and Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (ESAs). To
learn more about all of your options, visit www.savingforcollege.com.
February
2006 – This column was authored in cooperation
with Financial Planning Association.
This
material is for informational purposes only and is
not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations
to any individual or group. Before making any financial
decisions or commitments, please consult with your
financial professional.
Securities offered through
LPL Financial,
Member FINRA/SIPC.
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