College Is a Big, Fat, Hairy Rip-Off! (But Save for It Anyway)
Published on - March 9th, 2011 (by Robert Brokamp) This is a guest post from Robert Brokamp of The Motley Fool. Robert is a Certified Financial Planner and the adviser for The Motley Fool’s Rule Your Retirement service. He also has a newly reinvigorated blog, and you can have your day interrupted once or twice by his Twittering. Robert contributes one new article to Get Rich Slowly every two weeks.
A few weeks ago, the proprietor of this establishment (J.D. “The letters in ‘Get Rich Slowly’ can be rearranged to spell ‘The Sly Cowgirl’” Roth) asked me to address a reader’s question — specifically, how should a parent save for college (perhaps because I once wrote a book on the topic, though it’s now outdated). But first, let me say this:
College costs too much, it saddles young people with too much debt, and it forces students to “learn” things they’ll soon forget — and it won’t matter because it wouldn’t help them further their careers anyhow.
As reported by InsideHigherEd.com, a new book (Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses) finds that 36% of students “did not demonstrate any significant improvement in learning” over four years of college. The authors (themselves professors) write that, for many undergrads, “drifting through college without a clear sense of purpose is readily apparent.”
Do you want to pay $80,000 to $200,000 for that?
Because that’s how much it’ll cost, assuming the fruit of your loins graduates in four years (only 53% of students graduate within six years). According to the College Board, it costs an average $20,339 a year for in-state tuition, room, board, textbooks, personal expenses, and transportation. For the average private school, that figure is $41,192. To be fair, some of these costs would still be incurred if kids didn’t go to college; they still have to eat, board, transport, and read (I hope). But they could do it much more cheaply on their own. Consider textbooks. The average student spends more than $1,000 on these annually updated tomes, because the student has to pay $50 to $100 for the most recent edition. Only people in college pay that much for a book.

Yes, many students get “aid.” But much of that is in the form of loans. Here’s a shocker: The value of all student loans now exceeds all credit card debt. Twenty-somethings are beginning their careers with thousands of dollars of debt that has to be paid back with low-person-on-the-totem-pole salaries (assuming they can even find a job).
Here’s the problem: College costs lack the normal market-based price controls. If you’re told you need something, and someone is willing to lend you the money to get it, and you’re told it’s a great “investment,” then you’ll do it — regardless of the price. The government wants to help, too, with grants, low-rate loans, and tax benefits. That’s all very well-intentioned, but it’s another reason why colleges can jack up prices and get away with it.
According to James Altucher (who’s passionate and articulate about what a scam college has become):
College costs have historically gone up much faster than inflation. Since 1978, cost of living has gone up three-fold. Medical costs, much to the horror of everyone in Congress, has gone up six-fold. And college education has gone up a whopping tenfold. This is beyond the housing bubble, the stock market bubble, any bubble you can think of.
Altucher also takes on the argument that college is a great investment. Yes, people with college degrees earn more over their lifetimes. But if a person invested the cost of college and stayed away from the Ivory Tower, she might have more than the person with the B.A. or B.S.
Save Anyway
Now that I got that off my chest, the truth is I have a student in college now, and I have 529 savings accounts for my other three children (more on 529s later). Like it or not, many professions require a college degree. Plus, it can be a great experience and all that. So if you’ve procreated, then you should save for your creation’s education. However, first make sure you’re saving enough for your own retirement, as I explain in this video I did for LifeTuner (AARP’s very hip website for the younger crowd):
(Quick summary: A kid can always find a way to pay for school. However, if you reach your 60s or 70s without enough retirement savings, you won’t be able to retire. There’s no such thing as a geezer scholarship. Plus, you can use some of the money in your retirement accounts to pay for college.)
Which finally brings us to the reader question:
My wife and I are expecting our first child this summer. In an effort to stay ahead of the game, I’d like to start saving for his or her college education. A 529 plan seems like the obvious choice here, but I know little about them.
What are the pros and cons to this type of account? Are there other options I should consider instead? How do I choose a reasonable amount to save so that I’m unlikely to end up either coming up quite short when it’s time for school, or overshooting and having lots of money left over in there? One final question: Can I start such a savings account before the child’s actually born?
Indeed, the 529 account is the obvious — and, in my opinion, best — choice. The programs are sponsored by states, who hire financial-services firms to run them. There are two flavors: savings plans and prepaid plans. I won’t spend much time on the latter — which allow you to pay for a future education at somewhere close to today’s prices — since most states don’t offer a prepaid plan, and many have experienced financial difficulties. Choosing a prepaid plan might be a good idea if:
- Your kids will go to a state school in your state, and
- Your state’s plan is on solid financial ground.
For more on prepaid plans, read this Smart Money article (which also mentions a private-school option).
The Pros and Cons of the 529
529 savings plans are like any investment account in that you contribute as much as you can, on a monthly or irregular basis (though most plans have modest minimums and all have huge maximums — from $235,000 to $380,000).
Here are the benefits of a 529 savings plan:
- The money grows tax-free as long as it’s used for qualified higher-education expenses at any qualified institution — in your state or elsewhere (that includes the overwhelming majority of schools in the U.S., and many in other countries as well).
- Some states offer benefits to residents who participate in the state plan. For example, here in the great Commonwealth of Virginia, I can deduct $4,000 per account annually that I contribute to my kids’ plans on my state (but not federal) income tax return. Thus, if you’re interested in a 529, start by investigating your state’s plan. However, you don’t have to choose your state’s plan, so if it doesn’t offer compelling benefits and the plan is subpar (e.g., too expensive), look at the plans offered by other states.
- The investment choices vary by plan, but most are generally low-cost mutual funds, and most offer age-based portfolios that are more aggressive when kids are in the single digits (owning more stocks than bonds), but gradually get more conservative (all on their own — no rebalancing required!) as the Big Day gets closer.
- The assets in a 529 are considered property of the account owner (usually a parent or grandparent), and not the student. This helps when it comes to determining financial aid since assets in the student’s name have a more negative impact on aid eligibility. Also, the kid can’t decide to take the money and blow it all in Amsterdam.
- When you open an account, you have to name the beneficiary, which is usually the kid who will eventually go to college. However, if she/he/it decides not to, the account can be transferred to another qualified relative. This is actually how you can begin saving in a 529 before your belly of joy is born. Open an account with yourself as both the owner and the beneficiary, and then transfer the account sometime after your offspring is womb-sprung.
Now, the not-as-good stuff:
- If you use the money for anything other than qualified expenses, you’ll pay income taxes and a 10% penalty on any earnings (though not the amount you contributed).
- You can only change the investment choice once a year. No biggie, really, but disappointing for you market-timers, and nerve-wracking during a crash (as in 2008).
- You can invest only in mutual funds and, in some plans, exchange-traded funds (ETFs). If you prefer individual stocks (i.e., shares of individual companies), the 529 may not be for you.
- “529” is a boring name. Boring! It’s named after a tax code, just like 401(k) and 403(b). But what would you expect from a country that names the mansion in which the most powerful person in the world lives, the “white house”?
How Much to Save
Determining how much to save is difficult, because it depends on future investment returns and college-cost inflation. However, a place to start would be to find out the current cost of attending a school your future Einstein is likely to attend. Then, fiddle with a few online calculators, such as the ones from the College Board and Savingforcollege.com. If you’re asked for investment return and inflation assumptions, choose 6% for both (you can ratchet down the former and/or increase the latter if you want to play it safer).
Finally, the absolute best source of information about 529 plans is Savingforcollege.com. You’ll learn plenty about the general rules, but also the particulars about each state’s plan. But hurry — you’ll need to start saving soon to afford a big, fat, hairy college rip-off.

Kris and J.D., back in the Olden Days when college was cheaper
This article is about Ask the Readers, Education, Kids, Planning
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There is a reality here that is ignored. Not all “college” is created equal.Perceived quality of institution matters.
A Harvard JD equals lots of debt, but also 160K a year in big law. A third tier law school equals lots of debt and no job prospects in a saturated field.
This is the same for Liberal Arts. Investment banks and consulting firms line up to hire top tier (Harvard, MIT, etc) college grads, regardless of Major. It is accepted that these kids are intelligent and hardworking, and assumption that can no longer be made about most college graduates, esp in the humanities.
Either attend an elite institution or learn a real skill in college like engineering, IT, Accounting…the options are endless. No one cares about your Masters degree in Sociology that you got from University of South Florida.
It is just reality.
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“The reason I’m asking is because I know several coworkers who have saved for their kids education, and their kids take it for granted…not thinking twice about the fact that they will now be able to save & buy for a home at least 10 years sooner than their debt-laden peers. Wouldn’t it be nice to secretly save for your kids education, make them think they’re going to have to pay off loans themselves (so they do all the loan calculations/repayment plan/etc etc themselves, and budget for payments once they land the job, and realize it will take forever to have money for a house downpayment), then *surprise!* you can pay it all off for them, and they will have a sense of appreciation & gratitude for what you have done for them?”
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I think this whole concept is a little bit extreme. I think there are many people who have considerable resources and still manage to teach their children to appreciate the good fortune of their situation. In the end, that’s probably better than lying to them about how poor you are.
My kids live in a nice, comfortable house. It’s warm in the winter and cool in the summer. The refrigerator and pantry are always stocked. Many kids in the world don’t enjoy this standard of living, so it’s fair to say that mine, at their young ages, take it for granted.
I’m not sure I should pretend that I can’t afford to feed them dinner for the next couple of nights, so they can go through the process of thinking about what garbage cans they should scrounge through, or what neighbors they should beg for food; and then suddenly POOF, have a few hot pizzas delivered as a nice surprise and say “Eat up, and at least now you have some gratitude for what I’ve done for you.”
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“I paid for it myself using a GI bill. So forgive me if I find it odd that the majority of parents today feel like they are obligated to pay for their kids college education. Is it a guilt thing? I made out just fine with no college debt.
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Like you, I paid for my education myself through the military, and from the experience I know that the service is not for everyone.
As hard as it is to believe, some of these modern-day, crazy, over-indulgent, helicopter parents of spoiled kids seem to have this guilt-induced feeling of wanting more opportunities for their children than what they enjoyed themselves. We’ve certainly never seen this before, so I shudder to think what the world is coming to with this next generation.
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I find it pretty amusing that the person who wrote this article and made sure to emphasize that college is a rip-off with BIG CAPITAL LETTERS still has multiple kids in/planning to go to college. Perhaps that’s the best evidence that “college” isn’t actually the rip-off he says it is? Someone who is giving investment advice probably wouldn’t make an argument for a completely worthless investment, would they? If they did, could you trust their advice in the first place?
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El Nerdo-Yep I’ve seen that video on Ted, it was awesome.
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LEARNING comes from within the individual.
Seeing no increase in education/learning amongst college students after 4 year education is pretty expected because only some people actually have the desire to learn something and be useful.
I am taking a Spanish class after work, and have the most annoying classmate (she is very young) and seems like her attitude is
“Okay I’m paying you Money, now MAKE me SPEAK SPANISH”..
That’s a learning FAIL.
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I’m glad we’re starting to see articles like these questioning the “default” assumption that you must go to college and get into tons of debt. I have mixed feelings about college, but I was lucky enough to have parents who saved for me and forced me to work the summers for my spending money.
Isn’t it amazing that whatever the government seems to push and subsidize doesn’t end up being all it’s cracked up to be? We had the mortgage bubble and now it seems the college degree bubble is upon us.
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I would have loved nothing more than to take a year off out of high school. As it is, medical insurance required me to stay in school FULL TIME in order to pay for my twice-a-month visits to the doctors offices. I worked, went to school full time, and couldn’t get time off to recover from Mononucleosis, lest I lose the health insurance that I needed to cover said mono and a few other things. IT’S RIDICULOUS.
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(I haven’t read all the replies, so someone else might’ve already made this point.)
Harvard, Princeton, and similarly endowed Ivy League schools are REALLY fantastic deals. They give pretty generous grants, not loans, so students *do not graduate with debt* (at least debt from college). I love this. The fact that they don’t give academic/athletic scholarships (as #28 complained) is kind of moot, because they give an enormous amount of need-based aid, and their aid (last I checked) was better than what at least one state school was offering. In addition, I think they’re pretty good deals for college in general–I went to Princeton, and the ‘networking’ opportunities are huge.
I hate running into the stereotype that the Ivies are expensive. At least several of them are shockingly meritocratic and affordable (hooray alumni donations…)–at the end, they’re almost always cheaper than state schools, and the education/experience is arguably better.
Also, Princeton at least encourages students to take a year off to travel and gain some world experience before starting college. Princeton also has a lot of ‘bridge’ employment and internship programs to help students find interesting and socially beneficial jobs after graduation.
I did my PhD at a big, famous state school and was really sad to find out how expensive it was and how few opportunities there were, especially for the smart/ambitious kids. It seemed really easy to get lost in enormous, dumbed-down classes, and there wasn’t enough interaction with alumni and professors to get a leg up in post-college life (or even explore the options).
Last point: Isn’t there a nice loan forgiveness program for people with direct federal loans? My sig other is using it to pay his med school and undergrad loans for 10 years, after which the balance is forgiven. The only rule is you have to work at a nonprofit, which isn’t necessarily hard.
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I just wonder if more people would be better off getting 2 year associate degrees or going into trades. Remember the trades can never be outsourced.
Since college is getting more expensive, will students and their parents choose these options more? I do wonder if articles like these are part of the problem.
If people are willing to pay for outrageously expensive college tuition then that sends a message to colleges that says that the public is fine with paying these high expensive prices and they try to keep raising tuition to see how much higher they can push tuition each year.
I think journalists and bloggers need to start exploring other options besides college.
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