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College Students need to learn about money.
Hello, is there anybody in there?
Just nod if you can hear me.
Pink Floyd or the
Scissor Sisters
I had a college business major ask me suggested classes. I told him to learn about personal finance.
He told me that personal finance classes didn’t count
towards his major.
If a college business major isn’t required to know about
personal finance, what chance do art and music students have?
Very little.
They will graduate from college as I did, knowing absolutely
nothing about handling money.
I got lucky. A financial
services company hired me and paid for me to get three professional
designations and two masters degrees.
I’ve spent the last 25 years immersed in the world of personal
finance.
Simple financial steps are the things that matter.
I can show someone how to calculate internal rates of
return. I would be much happier if I
could get that same person to rip up their credit cards.
Internal rates of return calculations require knowledge. Getting rid of credit cards means altering how
you live.
Lifestyle changes are a lot harder.
You can have all the knowledge in the world but if you are
paying 24% interest on credit cards, you are never going to get ahead.
Until I got out of college, my formal education in personal finance was
zilch. I learned from my parents and
from the school of hard knocks.
30 years ago, no one gave college students credit cards. You lived on what you had in the bank.
I was lured by other college temptations. Girls, beer, fast food. If
credit cards have been available, you could have added them to the list.
My lifestyle was dictated by lack of funds. Since all of my
friends had the same limitations, I never felt social pressures to keep up.
I worked during summer vacation and spring breaks. My car
cost $700. College was fun, even if I
didn’t wear designer clothes.
Now, it seems that an expensive spring break vacation is
mandatory for college students and high school students too. Skipping spring break automatically brands you
as a loser.
To paraphrase Tom Petty, (a singer from my college era) it
could be that the “losers” are the ones getting lucky. They aren’t coming out of college with a ton
of credit card debt.
Some people are paying for that week in Panama City 15 years later.
I live in a college town and interact with lots of college
students. Most are loaded with credit
card debt and have monster student loans to boot.
They are going to be enslaved by debt for years.
There are two solutions. One is not issue credit cards to students who
don’t have income. The second is to
teach people about money so they know to avoid easy credit
in the first place.
Neither are simple solutions.
Legislating against credit card companies seems futile. The
credit card companies have their arms around congress. That was evidenced by the “bankruptcy reform
act” of 2005 that was really a welfare bill for credit card companies.
Even though there has been insurmountable evidence that the
“bankruptcy reform” hurts consumers, there has been no call to
repeal it.
The credit card companies have better lobbyists than
consumers could ever dream of.
Educating college students is the second battle. Sending students into the world to make
stupid financial decisions seems like a waste of a college education but I
don’t see any movement towards making personal finance a requirement.
Colleges ought to think about requiring personal finance, if
only to protect their long term interests. Alumni overwhelmed by debt are never going
to drop big dollars in the endowment fund.
Colleges need to train people to think about money the way
Warren Buffet thinks about money. They
might be in line when someone gives a vast fortune to charity like Buffett did.
Graduates will be coming out to face the worst economy in recent
memory. While in school, I hope they can
say no to credit cards and easy credit.
It will be the best graduation present they ever give themselves.
Don McNay
will be signing his new book, Son of a
Son of a Gambler, at the Perkins Building on Eastern Kentucky University’s
campus, on Wednesday, January 23rd at 7 pm. All proceeds will go the Society of
Professional Journalists. You can write
to
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read other things
he has written at www.donmcnay.com
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