This makes me wonder: Are we pushing people too hard, fearing they’ll be financial failures if they don’t hit certain money milestones soon enough?
A Pew Research Center report generated headlines about how today’s young adults are behind in five frequently cited benchmarks of adulthood.
After analyzing Census Bureau data, Pew found that 21-year-olds are less likely than their predecessors four decades ago to have a full-time job, be married, be financially independent, live on their own or have a child. Being financially independent was defined as having income of at least 150 percent of the poverty line.
In 2021, about 68 percent of 25-year-olds were not living with their parents, compared with 84 percent in 1980, according to Pew.
This brings me to a column I wrote on financial tips for graduates. Readers had a lot to say, some disagreeing with my advice, which included paying off student loans before investing for retirement and not rushing to buy a home.
Here are my responses to those who took issue with my guidance.
‘The math is totally in favor of buying a home’
I said: Don’t listen to the collective “they.”
They will tell you renting is a waste of money. It’s not.
Comment: “Buy as soon as you can and rent rooms to friends,” one reader wrote.
What happens when the friends suddenly move out? Or they get laid off — last hired, first fired. Like so much about personal finance, it’s about the individual’s financial standing.
Gen Z — those 12 to 27 — are disproportionately struggling with higher consumer prices, housing costs, car insurance, and large student loan balances, according to a Washington Post analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
So, no, the math does not always favor purchasing a home, especially for young adults who haven’t had time to build a sufficient cash cushion to weather economic downturns or cover a major home-maintenance expense.
I’ve been at this for a long time. I work directly with a lot of people, which gives me an up-close view of how folks at all income levels and ages handle their money. Just because it works on paper doesn’t mean it works in real life.
Another person wrote siding with me: “There are so many unknowns early in a career — relocating for a job or graduate school, meeting a significant other [who] works in the other direction. Our financial adviser advised my 20-something son to wait until he knows he’ll be in one place for more like 5-7 years or until he gets married.”
‘Totally disagree’ with tackling college debt first
I said: Yes, young adults should invest so that they have a chance of their money beating inflation. But if they are leaving college with debt, tackle that first. They still have time to invest.
Comment: “Putting some money in a retirement account (yes, ‘investing’) as a young person — especially if there is a healthy employer match — is likely to be a very wise financial decision.”
I agree that, in some cases, it makes sense to put in enough money to get an employer’s match. However, for those coming out of school with significant debt that could take them decades to pay off, it’s better to get rid of that liability early before other obligations end up eating into student-loan payments.
Here’s what I witness — regularly.
Many graduates starting out don’t focus on their student loans and put the debt on pause through forbearance.
However, even after they begin making good money, they keep putting off paying the debt. Then they have kids, buy homes and live like the debt isn’t there, taking vacations and living above their means. Because the interest is being capitalized, the debt keeps growing.
Now in their 40s and 50s, they are panicking about paying the debt off before they retire.
By the way, thanks to the Securing a Strong Retirement Act (or Secure 2.0, enacted in 2022), employers can choose to make contributions to workers’ retirement accounts based on their student loan payments. If this benefit is offered, workers can concentrate on paying off the debt without missing out on matching contributions.
‘There is good debt and bad debt’
I said: Referring to debt with an adjective is unhelpful. It’s just debt, and it all can be destructive if overused and too oppressive.
Comments: “Bad debt means your net result is negative, like buying a fancy pair of shoes on a credit card and not paying it off. Good debt means your net result is positive, like a degree that gets you a better job that way more than covers the cost of the debt, or a house that appreciates, provides a place to live, and is a better lifestyle.”
There are many students who have debt and no degree. Or others paid a lot for a master’s degree that didn’t increase their income but stuck them with debt they won’t pay off for decades. Remember the Great Recession and the housing crisis?
When giving advice, you have to factor in behavior. I speak against characterizing loans as good or bad in the hope that people who need to pause before taking on any debt will.
I write for the masses. If I said a mortgage is “good” debt, some folks who shouldn’t buy a home will see homeownership only in the positive. They won’t do the math to see that their mortgage won’t leave room to save for retirement or build an emergency fund.
I agree with this comment: “I prefer the term ‘necessary debt’ rather than good or bad. What is necessary deserves careful consideration.”
If nothing else, the debate about my advice helped one young adult.
“From my perspective, it’s helpful to hear the wide-ranging perspectives folks have about these hot-button topics,” a 28-year-old D.C. reader said in an email. “I have always thought of personal finance as very cut-and-dry as if there was only one right way to do things. But there is a laundry list of learnings of what’s not the best idea. Finance isn’t always so cut-and-dry.”
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