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Apr 28, 2008 -- Who wants to be a teenage millionaire?

Many employers match what employees contribute to a 401(k) plan up to a certain limit. Well, Clark extended the same offer to his teen daughter about 4 years ago. He calls it "the daddy match" and he puts a dollar into her Roth account for every dollar of her pay she saves.

It's no secret that getting a teen to start saving early will help insure their financial security later in life. Clark loves pointing to a chart that shows a teen who starts saving at 15 and puts aside $2,000 for 7 years will have more than $1 million at 65. That's assuming a return on investment of about 8%, of course. Money has a strong ally in time. Most financial models show that your money doubles in value every 9 years.

Syndicated financial writer Umberto Cruz recently crunched the numbers and found that a 20 year old who puts $2,000 in a Roth for 10 years will have just under $500K at retirement time. And that's with never having to save again! If you wait until you're 30 and save at the same rate, you'll only have $370K at 65. So the message is clear: The earlier you start saving, the better off you'll be.

The same thinking applies to your car purchase. The Wall Street Journal reports that if you buy a Toyota Camry instead of a BMW and invest the money you saved, you'll have about $26K after 10 years. Do it all over again 10 years later and you'll have about $100K in 20 years. This is proof that an isolated decision today can make a huge difference down the road.


Unfortunately, Clark won't be able to answer any questions submitted via commenting. If you have a question, please try posting it to our message boards.

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What others are saying

  • Teenage money
    Clark fails to tell you that this assumes that your savings accrues 9.5% per year. If the rate drops to 8% your savings at 65 is cut in half. I wish he and Mr Ramsey would use realistic numbers or tell us where to earn a consistent 9 - 12% per year.
  • Teenage Money
    Somehow I wish I had heard Clark Howard's message when I was a teenager. Saving for retirement would have been a better choice than spending money on CD's, electronics, or Mcd's. Now all that stuff is gone and there's nothing to show for it.
    So I applaud teens learning to save.
  • Consider the purchasing power of money, not just absolute numbers
    I appreciate Clark's insights and information, but I don't agree that teenagers should save for retirement. They have better uses for their money at that age.

    No doubt that money saved during teenager years will grow to a large number by age 65. That's about 50 years. $1 million sounds like a lot of money today, but it's important to consider the purchasing power of that money in 50 years. My rule of thumb is that the purchasing power of money changes by X10 in about 30 years. Consider the change in the cost of housing over 30 years. My first house in 1975 was $32,000; today houses are about $300,000 (same geography). Based on this "rule" money saved today changes value by X10 (approximately) in 30 years and X16.6 in 50 years. So that $1million in 50 years provides about $60,000 in purchasing power....not very much. I advise my grandchildren to think about the expenses of establishing their life, car, apartment, clothes, education, and start saving for retirement when their career is well established.
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