You'd be hard pressed to find parents who don't want the best for their kids, and many of them are spending beyond their means to do it. Nearly half (46%) of moms surveyed for BabyCenter's 2015 Cost of Raising a Child report said they've gone into debt to cover child-rearing expenses, and that's ...
You'd be hard pressed to find parents who don't want the best for their kids, and many of them are spending beyond their means to do it. Nearly half (46%) of moms surveyed for BabyCenter's 2015 Cost of Raising a Child report said they've gone into debt to cover child-rearing expenses, and that's not terribly surprising, given that the survey puts the average annual cost of raising a kid at $13,248 (per child).
To go from being childless to spending more than $13,000 on raising a child the next year, new parents would need to make a lot of sacrifices and budget modifications to avoid going into debt, and as anyone who struggles to stay on budget would know, that's not easy. Of course, it's not a requirement to spend that kind of money as a parent — three out of five moms surveyed said they could raise their kids for less than they currently spend — but when it comes to spending money on children, it's hard to pull back.
The survey isn't a perfect representation of parents' financial predicaments (most glaring is the exclusion of fathers from this survey). Still, its findings are noteworthy. Not only do nearly half of moms report being in debt because of caring for their kids, about 60% said they're worried about having enough money to see their children to adulthood, and 53% said they're stressed out by trying to create "perfect" childhoods for their kids.
The moms surveyed insist it's not the social pressure that makes them spend so much on their children. The overwhelming majority (91%) said they spend what they do on extra activities not to outdo other parents but because they think it's best for their kids.