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Author Topic: Can couple afford to live on only 110,000 a year?  (Read 2764 times)

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Offline Matthew

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Can couple afford to live on only 110,000 a year?
« on: August 31, 2010, 12:11:16 PM »
Shawn and Mary Kate DeRose live comfortably on a combined $133,000 income.

The short version:
Right now the couple make $133,000. They are highly in debt (read: living beyond their means)
The wife got a deal to work half-time for half the pay, which would bring them DOWN to $110,000.

But here's what they're trying to decide: Can they afford to live on only $110,000 -- they have two children, after all!


(MONEY Magazine) -- Shawn and Mary Kate DeRose live comfortably on a combined $133,000 income. They pay their debts, save for retirement, even have room to splurge on dinners out and high-end gym memberships.

But the birth of their second child, Regan, in May has Mary Kate, 33, a literacy coach for a school district, thinking of dialing back to part-time work. "In a perfect world, I'd be able to spend more time with my girls," she says.

Her employer will let her go half-time for half pay: $32,600. But is that enough -- along with the $78,000 that Shawn, 33, earns as an assistant principal -- to support their lifestyle?

With a $3,600 monthly debt load that includes payments on a mortgage, home-equity loan, auto loan, and credit cards, their budget will be tight, warns Alexandria, Va., financial planner Tim Wesling.

They'd need to cut debt by $500 a month and other expenses by $1,300, he says. That's more than the DeRoses had bargained for.

"We really have to think about it," says Mary Kate.
Their Goals

1. Meet current expenses on a smaller monthly income: $8,600 rather than $11,000.

2. Keep saving enough for retirement. Right now they have $7,500 in cash, $38,500 in retirement funds and $2,100 in college savings accounts.
What They Must Do

1. Cut the debt. The DeRoses are paying 7.8% on a $63,000 home-equity loan. They could refinance and shave more than 2 percentage points off that rate, reducing their minimum payment by $200 a month. Wesling also wants them to nix the $300 a month they put on credit cards (for meals out, clothes, and the like).

2. Take the ax to expenses. The couple will save $500 a month on day care, but that still leaves them with $800 to cut. They might get rid of their older car and reduce costs across their budget to do it.

3. Keep saving. Shawn should continue stashing 10% of his income for retirement even as the couple trims elsewhere. As he gets raises, he should direct the cash to retirement and the home-equity loan.

Offline Matthew

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Can couple afford to live on only 110,000 a year?
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2010, 12:13:01 PM »
They splurge on dining out (probably not fast food) and "high-end" gym memberships -- even though they have debt service of $3,600 a month!?

Here we have some sheep that think the music's going to keep playing forever. If the Great Depression hits them, they will be financially ruined, and they will learn just how little it takes to survive on.

Matthew


Offline Matthew

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Can couple afford to live on only 110,000 a year?
« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2010, 12:13:58 PM »
Here's a chart that went with the story:


Offline Matthew

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Can couple afford to live on only 110,000 a year?
« Reply #3 on: August 31, 2010, 12:17:30 PM »
Here is a picture of the family.

If the past is any indicator of the future, the mom or dad here will probably sign up on CathInfo in about 4 months. It's happened about 5 times before!


Can couple afford to live on only 110,000 a year?
« Reply #4 on: August 31, 2010, 04:25:53 PM »
The things I would be able to do with $11,000 a month...