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Investing and Economics Blog

New Graduates Should Live Frugally

Graduates should put off living large after college

Good habits are important to start early,” said Laura Tarbox, founder of Tarbox Group, a financial planning firm in Newport Beach. “Take your finances as seriously as you do your relationship and career decisions, and you’ll end up way ahead of everybody else. But you’ve got to do it now. If you start even five years later, it just doesn’t work.”

The key, experts say, is a simple one: Live like a poor college student for a couple more years. While you’re doing that, you can pay off your debt, start a savings plan and embrace healthy habits that will serve you well for life.

This is exactly what I did. Outside of paying for college, extra living expenses in college were small. Just retaining the spending habit of college gets your personal finances off on a good start.

Sallie Smart, 22, economizes like crazy in her first years after school so that she can save $500 a month in her 401(k), and she keeps that pace up indefinitely. Her employer matches 50%, pitching in $250 a month. If she earns a 9% annual return on her investments, when she wants to retire at age 65 she’ll have $4.1 million in her nest egg.

Patty Procrastinator lives a little better when she first gets out of college and doesn’t start saving in the 401(k) until she’s 32. From that point, she also saves $500 a month, her employer adds $250 a month, and she earns a 9% return — just like Sallie. But at age 65, Patty will have only $1.7 million. That decade of delay will cost Patty $2.4 million.

Incidentally, Sallie contributes from her own money just $60,000 more than Patty does. The rest of the difference comes from employer contributions and investment returns.

By immediately starting to save for retirement and other needs you create a great foundation for your finances. Start saving for a house, a new car, create an emergency fund… Then you can create a situation where the only loans you need to take are for a house and maybe a new car – avoiding credit card debt or other personal loans.

Related: Personal Finance Basics: Health Insurance – Initial Retirement Account Allocations – Why Americans Are Going Broke

June 8th, 2008 by John Hunter | 3 Comments | Tags: Personal finance, Retirement, Saving, Tips

Comments

3 Comments so far

  1. Frugality Plus at Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog on September 4, 2008 12:45 pm

    [...] New Graduates Should Live Frugally – Frugality Versus Better Returns – Too Much Stuff September 4th, 2008 by John Hunter | | Tags: [...]

  2. Don’t Leave Your Dreams Hidden Away, Make Them Come True | Singapore on October 20, 2011 1:21 am

    Most of these ideas can be applied in a life where you live right where you are now…

  3. Looking at the Value of Different College Degrees at Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog on November 10, 2011 7:45 pm

    The lifetime advantage range from $1,090,000 for Engineering majors to $241,000 for Education majors…

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