ALL THE MONEY NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW | | | | | Daniel de Visé | Personal Finance Reporter
| | | | |
Happy Monday! It's Daniel de Visé with your top headlines. |
Parents spend those first 18 years saving for college, or trying to. But two recent surveys suggest that parents may spend even more on two expenses that hit earlier in childhood. |
Childcare costs more than college tuition, at least for an in-state student at a public campus, according to survey data from the lending platform NetCredit.com. Families now spend one-fifth of their annual income on child-rearing costs, according to the online lending marketplace LendingTree. Childcare costs $1,031 a year more than public college tuition, on average, NetCredit said. |
And then comes car ownership. At today's prices, a teen's first car also costs more than in-state tuition, according to an analysis by the car app Jerry. A typical family will spend $11,378 a year for a teen to own and drive a new car, compared with $10,940 for a year of in-state tuition, Jerry reported. | Saving for college is a major parenting goal, but childcare and that first car can cost even more. Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel, Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK |
Car recall targets 105,000 vehicles, including Toyota, Kia and Dodge |
Chrysler is recalling 125 of its 2023 Dodge Durango Pursuit SUVs equipped with a shifter mounted on the instrument panel, because the shifter may come out of gear while driving, whereupon bad things can happen. |
📰 More stories you shouldn't miss 📰 |
USA TODAY 10Best assembled an expert panel to narrow the field and nominate the markets that seem to stand out. They selected nominees across each of six categories, covering a diverse selection of goods, friendly customer service, and basic quality. Then, readers voted on their favorites to determine the winners. (Hint: "Fresh" is in; "Whole" is out.) |
Each weekday, The Daily Money delivers the best consumer news from USA TODAY. We break down financial news and provide the TLDR version: how decisions by the Federal Reserve, government and companies impact you. | | | | Parents worry about how they'll pay for college, but recent analyses show childcare and a car for your teen may cost more. | | | | Cost-of-living adjustments in workers' contracts have faded in recent decades. But some unions are pushing for COLAs again amid high inflation. | | | | Too many consumers settle for savings accounts that pay almost no interest. High-yield alternatives aren't hard to find. | | | | Starting early 2024, Amazon plans to add advertisements to Prime Video. The company aims to have "meaningfully fewer" commercials than competitors. | | | | Kia Sorrento SUVs, Toyota Tundra pickups and Dodge Durango SUVs were among vehicles recently recalled. Check here for car recalls this past week | | | | Novaform mattresses from Costco have been recalled after customer reports of mold. See which products apply. | | | | Some coastal Florida homes have already lost up to 19% of their value after wet, heavy storms like Ian have increased insurance risk, nonprofit data shows. | | | | The Social Security cost-of-living adjustment for 2024 won't be as high as the 8.7% adjustment for 2023, probably in the low 3% range. | | | | These are the best grocery stores for produce, prepared foods, deli offerings, and baked goods in 2023, according to USA TODAY 10Best readers. | | | | Apple has a solid command of the consumer tech market and could thrive once economic headwinds subside. | | | | | | | Sign up for the news you want | Exclusive newsletters are part of your subscription, don't miss out! We're always working to add benefits for subscribers like you. | | | | | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment