Yeah, but you really have to be able to see no difference between x cost now and x+20% later... For some people, there's a big difference, and the 20% is worth it.Captain Gh3y said:yep
20% less + no debt
The option that makes the most financial sense in raw dollar terms is not always the best one. In a great deal of cases it can actually represent the worst decision for an individual. Money is a means to an end - CONSUMPTION. And thus we need to analyse the effect of deffering HECS on consumption.GreenLeaf said:And is it worth it in the long-term?
But you don't pay for all the uni subjects you're ever going to do at the start of first year. You only pay for what you are going to do in the following semester.DefenceMinister said:saving of (50,000 * 1.03^5) - 50,000 = $7,964 = 16%
versus 1.08^5 = 46% increase over 5 years if you put it in a savings account.DefenceMinister said:Rizal, nice summary. You sound like an economist.
Also don't forget inflation. If your degree takes lets say 5 years and costs $50K and you choose to work overseas for 5 years after graduating. Assuming the RBA keeps the inflation rate at 3%.
Thats, saving of (50,000 * 1.03^10) - 50,000 = $17,196 = 34%
Or without the 5 years overseas work,
saving of (50,000 * 1.03^5) - 50,000 = $7,964 = 16%
This is assuming that prices of subjects are not corrected for inflation year to year, in my case they weren't.
Any eco students out there to back this up?