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Does your baby cost too much? LOL
Thinking about having a baby on purpose? You might want to think about the cost: 250,000 USD. That is a lot of life time dollars. Lets just say its 22 years (4 year of college included... like anyone ACTUALLY takes 4 years anymore) - that is about 11363 a year. Of course, kids are moving back with their parents after college because they can't find work (or work that supports them where they live) so what happens then?

Too bad the number250,000 is actually divided by 17 years... so the 250,000 dollars is actually not including college (of which could cost 40,000 dollars just for tuition, never mind room and board as well as books and equiptment.


For 2004, the newest data available, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that families making $70,200 a year or more will spend a whopping $269,520 to raise a child from birth through age 17. Higher-income families in urban areas in the West spend the most, $284,460.

Though not as steep, the figures for lower-income families are just as unsettling: $184,320 for families earning $41,700 to $70,200 and $134,370 for families making less than that. That breaks down to nearly $15,000 a year from birth to age 2 for families in the $65,800 -plus income bracket. As your child ages, he or she gets even more expensive, topping out at $15,810 from ages 15 to 17. This is no back-of-the-envelope guesstimate. The survey involves visits to, and interviews with, about 5,000 households, four times a year.

Nor is there much in the way of cost-effectiveness for larger families. With an older child of 16, the USDA study says, a family with a second child under 2 lays out $20,740 for the both of them each year, with the numbers growing progressively as the children get older. With three children -- the two older ones being 16 and 13 -- a third child aged 2 years or less rings up an annual bill of $24,160.


They have a chart too and evrything!!!

Doesn't quite get better than that when explaining something.

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