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Parents willing to go into debt to fund child education: HSBC

Parents with a child at college were spending Rs 2.05 lakh a year on their education

Parents willing to go into debt to fund child's education: HSBC survey

Teachers wishing good luck to students at an examination centre before they appear in their class XII standard exams of CBSE in Gurgaon

M Saraswathy Mumbai
HSBC’s latest edition of the Value of Education 'Foundations for the future' study found that a vast majority (71 per cent) of parents in India were willing to go into debt to fund their child’s university or college education. This rose to 76 per cent among those parents considering a university education abroad for their child.

The study found that fathers (78 per cent) and younger parents aged 34 or under (77 per cent) were more likely to consider getting into debt to fund their child’s university or college education, than mothers (64 per cent) and parents aged 35 or over (68 per cent).

S Ramakrishnan, head of retail banking and wealth management, HSBC India, said by having a financial plan to meet their family’s overall needs and reviewing it regularly, parents will be better placed to support their children’s studies without compromising on their own long-term financial goals.

Of the total number of parents surveyed in India, 41 per cent felt that funding their child’s education was more important than contributing to their own retirement savings. The study found that mothers (45 per cent) were more likely than fathers (37 per cent) to believe that contributing to their own retirement savings was less important than funding their child’s education.

Many parents (65 per cent) said paying for their child’s education made it more difficult to keep up with other financial commitments. Parents with a child at university or college were spending around Rs 2.05 lakh a year on average on their child’s education. However, nearly one in ten (9 per cent) parents did not know how much they spent each year on their child’s university or college education.

HSBC’s study found that parents shoulder most of the financial responsibility when it comes to paying for their child's education, and while the majority (70 per cent) fund it from their day-to-day income, many have saved towards it or would be willing to get into debt to fund their child's university or college education. In India, a vast majority of parents (86 per cent) fund their child’s education.

While nearly all (97 per cent) parents surveyed in India expected to be the main contributor of funding should their child go to university, over one in eight (13 per cent) expected their child to contribute to funding their own university costs. However, only 1%of children currently at university help to fund their own education.

The survey also found that over two in five (44 per cent) parents were concerned about how to fund their child’s education (e.g. from day-to-day income, loans or savings) and a similar proportion (41 per cent) were concerned about how much it will cost them. Other concerns parents had about funding their child’s education included, what to fund (39 per cent) and how it would affect their household’s other financial commitments (37 per cent). Parents considering a university education abroad for their child were the most concerned about how much it will cost them (44 per cent).

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First Published: Jun 21 2016 | 12:13 AM IST

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