skc
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10% AFTER tax return with NO RISK may be harder to get that you think.
I put in a lump sum into my HECS towards the end of the debt. Best time to do this is in May, before the CPI increase.
Basically dont make extra payments until you are on your last HECS payment for the financial year.
If you have $5000 left, and you know $5000 will come out of your tax return to pay it off, then simply pay appriox $4500 into your debt in May out of your own pocket. You should get a fair chunk of that back in your tax return anyways.
By doing this, you save 10%, and skip the CPI increase.
If you didnt do this, assuming 4% inflation like this year you would be paying $5000 anyways, and still left with $200 debt
By paying $4500, you then become debt free
Hope that makes sense. I didnt account for the tmie value of money from the time you pay in May to the time you do your tax return but I imagine it wouldnt be much. Also didnt take into account opportunity cost of paying 4500 in May as you could potentially invest this somehow and make more money.
compare this with your compulsory contributions:
this is paid from pre tax
the 25% however is a different story - the (immediate) benefit of it will offset any tax you have already paid on that contribution. This is zero risk. If you think you can outperform that return - remember that you need to put money AT RISK in order to just break even. How confident are you feeling?
Making an extra $300 a month will increase your borrowing power. This may help you borrow for investment property, share portfolio, etc
Ok, so we're on the same page, just using different terminology:
The minimum payment that you must make is calculated from your gross (pre tax) income. But it is paid from your net (post tax) income, as per Mitch's example above.
I know it is an old thread, but it is a current issue, that evolves from it.
Don't get too stressed apparently the HECS debt has blown out to $70billion, but hey everyone is ok with that, just keep enrolling for useless courses.
Until the govt takes the lead and stops promoting and paying people because of higher education diploma outcomes, rather than on merit and relevance the situation will continue.
The fiefdoms within the public sectors feed themselves on the taxpayer purse with the admission tickets the degrees and personal development courses that mismatch the menial and trivial tasks they are employed to carry out.....tasks a 15 yearold could do, albeit with some flare and innovation thrown in.
Trust me,having lived in the US for nearly 3 years now, the HECS system is the envy of petty much every ordinary American I speak with. I would rather 'subsidise' a few unused courses and degrees, than have a for profit system where only the wealthy can afford to get a 'good' (perceived) education and everything is judged on what uni you went to rather than the content of what you studied.
Australia has it very good when it comes to education and if you want to continue to grow as a society, reducing education is not the answer
Trust me,having lived in the US for nearly 3 years now, the HECS system is the envy of petty much every ordinary American I speak with. I would rather 'subsidise' a few unused courses and degrees, than have a for profit system where only the wealthy can afford to get a 'good' (perceived) education and everything is judged on what uni you went to rather than the content of what you studied.
Australia has it very good when it comes to education and if you want to continue to grow as a society, reducing education is not the answer
An illiterate graduate with an arts degree is still illiterate and should NOT be in the running for a job that a smart tradie could fill much better.
Arts degrees get a bad rap. Some counterpoints...It's also not the content of what you studied[/B] that matters, but the proficiency that you gained and its relevance for the job.
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