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Uncle Sam can help with education costs

December 30, 2013 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I have rental property, own my home outright, am contributing to a 401(k) and have a pension, so finances are not a big issue. I do have an adult son in law school and would like to know the most fiscally prudent way to pay for it. Are there limits on gifts, and can the money be tax deductible since it is an investment to increase his future earnings?

Answer: Interest on student loans is generally tax deductible for the person who takes out the loan if his or her income is below certain limits (the deduction begins to phase out at $50,000 adjusted gross income for single filers and $100,000 for joint filers), said Mark Luscombe, principal analyst for CCH Tax & Accounting North America.

Education tax credits also can help offset college costs. The American Opportunity Credit is limited to the first four years of college, but law school expenses could qualify for the Lifetime Learning Credit, Luscombe said. The credit starts to phase out at $53,000 of adjusted gross income for single filers and $107,000 for joint filers, he said.

If you don’t qualify for other credits and your son is under age 24, you may be able to deduct up to $4,000 in qualified education expenses if your income is below certain limits (modified adjusted gross income of $160,000 if married filing jointly or $80,000 if single), Luscombe said. You can find out the details in IRS Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education.

Another potential tax benefit has to do with the gift tax. You can avoid the hassle of filing a gift tax return, or using up any portion of your gift tax exclusion, if you pay tuition or medical bills for someone else. You have to pay the provider directly — you can’t cut a check to the person receiving the services.

Normally, you’d have to file a gift tax return if you gave any recipient more than the gift tax exclusion limit, which is $14,000 in 2013. You wouldn’t be subject to an actual gift tax, however, until the sum of the contributions over that $14,000 limit exceeded your lifetime gift exemption. The gift exemption is currently $5.25 million, so the gift tax is an issue that few people face.

If you are that rich and generous, then you’ll probably want to discuss your situation with a qualified estate planning attorney to find the best ways to give.

Filed Under: College Savings, Q&A, Taxes Tagged With: education tax credits, gift tax, student loan interest deduction, Student Loans

Monday’s need-to-know money news

December 30, 2013 By Liz Weston

Today’s top story: What a poor credit score can cost you. Also in the news: The worst money moves for the new year, how to cut next year’s expenses, and tips to get tax season started off on the right foot. Tax refund

What a poor credit rating is costing you
Your job prospects could be at risk.

10 worst money moves for the new year
What NOT to do in 2014.

14 Ways to Slash Your Expenses in the New Year
Do you really still need a landline?

7 unbeatable tax tips for year’s end
April 15th will be here before you know it.

Kids and Money: Advice for mastering finances in 2014
How to teach your kids to spend and save smartly in the coming year.

Filed Under: Liz's Blog Tagged With: Budgeting, credit rating, finance tips, Kids, kids and money, Savings, Taxes, tips

Column: Five ways do-gooders can erase student-loan debt

December 30, 2013 By Liz Weston

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – When P.K. Drago graduated from George Washington University in 2009 at the peak of the Great Recession with $40,000 in student loan debt, she decided to do volunteer work.

“It was not a good time” to get a job, the 26-year-old now says, and so she joined AmeriCorps, a volunteer organization that is essentially the domestic analog of the Peace Corps.

While working for AmeriCorps, she stocked shelves at a Los Angeles food bank, mucked out stalls at a therapeutic horse-riding camp near Sacramento and helped remediate mold in New Orleans.

She picked up experience that eventually helped her qualify for her current job as a paid, full-time volunteer coordinator for Habitat for Humanity in Washington, D.C.

And she earned an extra “bonus” benefit: AmeriCorps gave her about $10,000 in education awards that she could use to pay off her college loans.

For graduates and others saddled with student loan debt, AmeriCorps is one of many programs that offer grants, cancellation or forgiveness that can reduce the burden. Many are particularly helpful for graduates who work in low-paying fields or do volunteer work.

One such program, Income-Based Repayment (IBR), recently received a big publicity push from the U.S. Department of Education after complaints that too few borrowers knew about it and that applying was difficult.

Under IBR, approved by Congress in 2007, payments of federal student loans are capped at 15 percent of “discretionary income,” defined as the amount over 150 percent of poverty levels for a borrower’s household size.

In practice, payments are usually less than 10 percent of gross income, said Mark Kantrowitz of Edvisors Network. Any remaining balances are forgiven after 10 years of payments if a debtor has a public service job, or after 25 years otherwise.

A more recent variation of IBR is known as “Pay as You Earn.” This program limits payments to 10 percent of discretionary income and offers forgiveness after 20 years of payments. Pay as You Earn is available for loans made under the federal Direct Loan program after October 1, 2011.

After President Barack Obama released a memorandum last year fretting that “too few borrowers are aware of the options available to them,” the Education Department streamlined the application process and sent emails to more than 3 million borrowers to publicize the existence of these programs.

RELATIVELY EASY, READERS SAY

Several readers wrote on my Facebook page that they found qualifying for IBR to be relatively easy.

“I had no trouble,” wrote Clint Lyle of Nashville, Tennessee. “Downloaded the form, filled it out, attached a couple recent pay stubs, and voila! In three weeks I had a very affordable payment. It’s a truly wonderful program.”

Yet many overburdened borrowers are still in the dark about the program, said Persis Yu, staff attorney for the National Center for Consumer Law, which runs the Student Loan Borrower Assistance site.

“I’m still working with people who don’t know that it exists,” Yu said.

Other programs tie reductions in student loan debt to volunteer or military service or to jobs teaching, practicing law or providing healthcare in high-need areas.

Those who teach in a low-income elementary or secondary school for five consecutive years, for example, may be eligible to have up to $17,500 in federal student loan forgiveness. Loan repayment assistance programs, available from schools, employers, states and the federal government, help lawyers make their payments. The Equal Justice Works site (www.equaljusticeworks.org/)offers information.

Doctors and nurses can get loan forgiveness if they work in areas that lack adequate medical care through the National Health Service Corps and the Nursing Education Loan Repayment Program. The National Institutes of Health’s NIH Loan Repayment Programs, meanwhile, repay up to $35,000 per year of student loan debt for people pursuing careers in biomedical, behavioral, social and clinical research.

The federal government allows its agencies to use student loan repayment as a recruiting tool. Not all do, but the Department of Defense is one agency that has embraced the federal student loan repayment program, which pays $10,000 a year in student loan debt for employees who commit to a three-year contract.

Those who may not want to commit for three years can still get benefits by volunteering. AmeriCorps’ education awards, for example, are given after volunteers complete their 10- to 12-month stints. The amount is equal to the size of Pell Grants for the award year, which currently is $5,550, and volunteers can earn a maximum of two awards. Volunteers also can qualify for loan deferral and the National Service Trust will pay accumulated interest, a benefit that in Drago’s case amounted to more than $2,000.

Drago used one of her awards to pay down her Stafford student loans and plans to use the other for further education.

“I’m hoping to go to graduate school in the next five years, and some schools will match the value” of AmeriCorps grants, Drago said. “It’s a great program.”

(The author is Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.)

(Editing by Linda Stern and Steve Orlofsky)

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Five ways do-gooders can erase student-loan debt

December 30, 2013 By Liz Weston

LOS ANGELES, Dec 30 (Reuters) – When P.K. Drago graduated
from George Washington University in 2009 at the peak of the
Great Recession with $40,000 in student loan debt, she decided
to do volunteer work.

“It was not a good time” to get a job, the 26-year-old now
says, and so she joined AmeriCorps, a volunteer organization
that is essentially the domestic analog of the Peace Corps.

While working for AmeriCorps, she stocked shelves at a Los
Angeles food bank, mucked out stalls at a therapeutic
horse-riding camp near Sacramento and helped remediate mold in
New Orleans.

She picked up experience that eventually helped her qualify
for her current job as a paid, full-time volunteer coordinator
for Habitat for Humanity in Washington, D.C.

And she earned an extra “bonus” benefit: AmeriCorps gave her
about $10,000 in education awards that she could use to pay off
her college loans.

For graduates and others saddled with student loan debt,
AmeriCorps is one of many programs that offer grants,
cancellation or forgiveness that can reduce the burden. Many
are particularly helpful for graduates who work in low-paying
fields or do volunteer work.

One such program, Income-Based Repayment (IBR), recently
received a big publicity push from the U.S. Department of
Education after complaints that too few borrowers knew about it
and that applying was difficult.

Under IBR, approved by Congress in 2007, payments of federal
student loans are capped at 15 percent of “discretionary
income,” defined as the amount over 150 percent of poverty
levels for a borrower’s household size.

In practice, payments are usually less than 10 percent of
gross income, said Mark Kantrowitz of Edvisors Network. Any
remaining balances are forgiven after 10 years of payments if a
debtor has a public service job, or after 25 years otherwise.

A more recent variation of IBR is known as “Pay as You
Earn.” This program limits payments to 10 percent of
discretionary income and offers forgiveness after 20 years of
payments. Pay as You Earn is available for loans made under the
federal Direct Loan program after Oct. 1, 2011.

After President Barack Obama released a memorandum last year
fretting that “too few borrowers are aware of the options
available to them,” the Education Department streamlined the
application process and sent emails to more than 3 million
borrowers to publicize the existence of these programs.

RELATIVELY EASY, READERS SAY

Several readers wrote on my Facebook page that they found
qualifying for IBR to be relatively easy.

“I had no trouble,” wrote Clint Lyle of Nashville,
Tennessee. “Downloaded the form, filled it out, attached a
couple recent pay stubs, and voila! In three weeks I had a very
affordable payment. It’s a truly wonderful program.”

Yet many overburdened borrowers are still in the dark about
the program, said Persis Yu, staff attorney for the National
Center for Consumer Law, which runs the Student Loan Borrower
Assistance site.

“I’m still working with people who don’t know that it
exists,” Yu said.

Other programs tie reductions in student loan debt to
volunteer or military service or to jobs teaching, practicing
law or providing healthcare in high-need areas.

Those who teach in a low-income elementary or secondary
school for five consecutive years, for example, may be eligible
to have up to $17,500 in federal student loan forgiveness. Loan
repayment assistance programs, available from schools,
employers, states and the federal government, help lawyers make
their payments. The Equal Justice Works site ()offers
information.

Doctors and nurses can get loan forgiveness if they work in
areas that lack adequate medical care through the National
Health Service Corps and the Nursing Education Loan Repayment
Program. The National Institutes of Health’s NIH Loan Repayment
Programs, meanwhile, repay up to $35,000 per year of student
loan debt for people pursuing careers in biomedical, behavioral,
social and clinical research.

The federal government allows its agencies to use student
loan repayment as a recruiting tool. Not all do, but the
Department of Defense is one agency that has embraced the
federal student loan repayment program, which pays $10,000 a
year in student loan debt for employees who commit to a
three-year contract.

Those who may not want to commit for three years can still
get benefits by volunteering. AmeriCorps’ education awards, for
example, are given after volunteers complete their 10- to
12-month stints. The amount is equal to the size of Pell Grants
for the award year, which currently is $5,550, and volunteers
can earn a maximum of two awards. Volunteers also can qualify
for loan deferral and the National Service Trust will pay
accumulated interest, a benefit that in Drago’s case amounted to
more than $2,000.

Drago used one of her awards to pay down her Stafford
student loans and plans to use the other for further education.

“I’m hoping to go to graduate school in the next five years,
and some schools will match the value” of AmeriCorps grants,
Drago said. “It’s a great program.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Can you be too cautious about spending money?

December 23, 2013 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I think I have a phobia about spending money. I’m a young professional who has devoted a lot of time to building up my savings account. I also contribute sizable amounts to my 401(k) and IRA each month. I pay off my credit cards each month, and I am making larger-than-necessary payments on my small student loans. Still, I feel as if every time I spend money on something — clothing, travel, furniture, etc. — I am undoing my hard work. It makes me scrutinize every decision until I either give up or make an impulse purchase. Is this normal? How do I know when it is OK to actually spend the money I have worked to save?

Answer: Being cautious about spending money is fine. If making purchases causes you great anxiety, though, or you’re unnecessarily compromising your quality of life, then you may want to seek help.

People with irrational fears of spending money may put off necessary doctor visits, buy unhealthy food because it’s cheap (at least in the short run), refuse to make charitable contributions or forgo pleasurable experiences. Instead of using money as a tool to live a good life, they make saving an end in itself.

Since you’re by nature a saver and a planner, you should use those strengths to free yourself from unnecessary concerns about spending money. If you enjoy travel, for example, plan a few trips and set aside money in advance to pay for them. Do the same thing with clothing or furniture upgrades. Planning and knowing how much you have to spend can help you dispel some of your anxiety and minimize the chances of regret.

Talking to a therapist or a financial planner could give you some additional strategies for dealing with your worries.

Filed Under: Q&A, Saving Money, The Basics Tagged With: phobias, saving, spending

Don’t invest emergency cash

December 23, 2013 By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I always hear you talking about having an emergency savings fund. Most people that I’ve heard talk about this recommend keeping it in cash. I just couldn’t stand watching that money languish in a low-interest savings account, so I recently moved it over to my brokerage account and purchased a few exchange-traded funds. My wife and I are under 30 and we both have very stable jobs. We have adequate insurance (including a home warranty). We also have a $20,000 signature line of credit through our credit union in case of an emergency, in addition to multiple credit cards with high limits and no revolving balances. I feel that we are covered in case of an emergency with the credit line alone. Does all of this sound reasonable to you or should I go back to keeping my emergency fund in cash?

Answer: Lines of credit can be a reasonable substitute for an emergency fund for people who have more pressing financial goals, such as saving for retirement and paying off debt.

But there’s really nothing like cash in the bank for meeting life’s inevitable financial setbacks. Even seemingly stable jobs can be lost, and lines of credit can get used up fairly quickly. If these personal setbacks happen at the same time as a stock market downturn, your emergency fund could dwindle dramatically.

That’s why it’s best to keep emergency cash safe and accessible in an FDIC-insured bank account. You can squeeze a little extra return from the money by opting for one of the online banks that’s paying close to 1%. Trying to squeeze much more, though, increases the odds that it won’t be there when you need it the most.

Filed Under: Investing, Q&A, The Basics Tagged With: emergency fund, Investing

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