With cost of higher education shooting up, fixed income
return options are unlikely to help you save for your child’s future. You need
to aim for equity returns.
People usually save either for retirement or with a specific
goal in mind. One of the goals is children’s future like education or marriage,
while other goals could be to buy a house, car amongst others. This article
focuses on the children’s future as a goal.
There are 3 key variables that you broadly need to keep in
mind when planning for children:
The amount you may need for the child’s education (and
marriage)
Years left to the event
Return expectation to build in
As you can see, there is a vast difference in the monthly
amount you need to save, with difference combination of years left, and returns
you will earn.
So our first advice to you is to start early. If you start
investing for a child when you marry, you may have as many as 20 years ahead of
you. But if you start when the child is say 5 or 8 years old, then you could be
left with barely 10-12 years. The more the years you have, the less you need to
set aside on a monthly basis.
The other critical part is the return your savings are
generating. It is common to find parents investing in fixed deposits or Public
Provident fund(PPF) to sponsor their children’s education or marriage. While as
an investment option it is safer, it also generates paltry returns of 8-9% per
annum. While interest on PPF is tax-free, that on fixed deposit is taxable,
which pulls down the post-tax returns even further. Given the rate at which
cost of higher education is shooting up in the country, debt definitely seems
an investment option not worth considering.
As against this, if you try to aim for equity investments,
your returns could be between 12-14% per annum, which is the bare minimum
returns equity markets show over long periods.
As your approach the last 2-3 years of the child’s
educational needs, you can choose to shift the portfolio towards debt, to
eliminate any volatility risk – though this would not be a major consideration
as the requirement for funds would be spread over a 3-4 year period.
Many parents prefer to open an investing account in the name
of the child, in order to isolate the account, accommodate for gifts in the
name of the child, and for tax reasons. If you plan to save in the name of the Child Plans. The best
investment is in an investment in education".
Source: http://bestsavingsplan.tumblr.com/post/143835066329/how-to-plan-for-your-childs-future-with-mutual

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