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Having a baby? Then
paying off credit cards has become overdue
By Lucy
Lazarony Bankrate.com
One
of the best financial moves expectant parents can make is to pay down
debt, especially credit cards.
"Finances are only going to get tighter after
the baby arrives," says Joy Christine Hollins, an administrator
at American Family Debt Counseling Centers.
M. Eileen Dorsey, a certified financial planner
in St. Louis, Mo., adds, "If you have any credit card debt, pay
it off. And stop using the card unless you can pay it off every
month. It's very hard to pay down credit card debt once you have
kids because kids are so expensive."
How expensive? According to a new U.S. Department
of Agriculture survey of more than 12,000 husband-wife households,
a typical middle income family spends $9,230 a year on a newborn
-- $173,880 total through age 17. The USDA's survey is available
online in
PDF format.
With diapers, formula and day-care to pay for
-- not to mention any hospital bills -- there's not going to be
a lot of money left over once that bundle of joy is carried home.
High credit card bills will only drain finances further.
Expenses
rise, incomes fall
Money gets especially tight when a once-working parent decides to
stay at home.
"You can't work overtime constantly because
you have a baby at home which you have to take care of," says Barbara
Hetzer, co-author of How
Can I Ever Afford Children? Money Skills for New and Experienced
Parents. "When you have a baby
it throws everything off. You don't know if both people will be
able to work full-time or full-tilt anymore."
Because household income is likely to dip, if
not dive, after the blessed event, that's all the more reason for
parents-to-be to clear away card debt. Otherwise, they may end up
paying for that pre-child Maui vacation well into Junior's third
year.
Couples can prepare for parenthood's financial
jolt by learning to live on one salary ahead of time.
Learn
to live on one salary
Living on a single salary means making do without exotic vacations,
designer clothes or a new living room suite. It means taking a lunch
to work twice a week instead of eating out.
"You don't do all the things you want to do
and buy all the things you want. You learn to do without," says
Marilyn Steinmetz, a certified financial planner in West Hartford,
Conn. "You no longer buy for yourself. You buy for the child."
The sooner would-be parents start scaling back
their lifestyle, the better.
"Ideally, when they get married, they should
figure out finances and figure out debt," Steinmetz says. "If they
can live on one salary, use the other one to pay off debt and then
sock it away."
Once credit card debt is paid down, the next
step is building
up an emergency fund. Ideally, every family should be able to
get their hands on three to six months' salary, but a $2,000 or
$3,000 cushion is better than nothing.
Carry
a 'clear' card for emergencies
At the very least, clear off one credit card and reserve it for
unexpected and inevitable expenses -- such as flying home from a
business trip early when the baby gets sick.
"A credit card is really for emergencies," Hollins
says. "Every family should have one."
Avoid racking up lots of new debt by shopping
for baby with your head as well as your heart.
"You have to be careful not to get caught up in the frenzy of it all,"
says Alan Fields, co-author of Baby
Bargains. "You might want to take an experienced mom with
you shopping. Ask her what's useful, what's helpful, what's not."
When shopping for baby, stick
to the basics such as a crib, a stroller, T-shirts, blankets,
diapers.
"You don't have to go over the edge for that
stuff -- certainly not on a credit card," Hetzer said.
You
can make it work
As important as it is to have finances in order and to plan ahead
for a child, the greater question may be whether a couple is emotionally
prepared to be parents. Are they ready to make the sacrifices that
go along with being mom and dad?
"There really is never a great time to have
a baby. You can always save more money. You can always be more prepared.
You have to pick a time and just do it," Hetzer says. "If you're
emotionally ready you can make the finances work.
"People have been having children since the
beginning of time. You can afford them. Everybody always does."
-- Updated: Aug. 1, 2003
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