OP says in the first post that he will be a college freshman next year. That makes him about 17-18 years old currently. Keep that in mind when reading this thread.
jc3900 - You mentioned the low savings rate of the average American. Do you know how that rate is calculated? It DOES NOT include retirement plan contributions. So if you were putting 25% of your income into your 401k plan and doing no savings outside of that plan, you would show up in the statistics as having a 0% savings rate. It also DOES NOT include home equity. In 2007, we prepaid about $6,000 of our home loan. We also made the regular scheduled payments that further increased our equity. That doesn't count toward our savings rate either in the national stats.
So that national savings figure is flawed and isn't really as alarming as it looks. Plus, it can't be accurately compared to the savings rate 20-30 years ago because of the 401k factor. And home ownership is at a record level today, much higher than 30 years ago, so not including home equity throws off the comparison, too.
jc3900 - You mentioned the low savings rate of the average American. Do you know how that rate is calculated? It DOES NOT include retirement plan contributions. So if you were putting 25% of your income into your 401k plan and doing no savings outside of that plan, you would show up in the statistics as having a 0% savings rate. It also DOES NOT include home equity. In 2007, we prepaid about $6,000 of our home loan. We also made the regular scheduled payments that further increased our equity. That doesn't count toward our savings rate either in the national stats.
So that national savings figure is flawed and isn't really as alarming as it looks. Plus, it can't be accurately compared to the savings rate 20-30 years ago because of the 401k factor. And home ownership is at a record level today, much higher than 30 years ago, so not including home equity throws off the comparison, too.
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