Child Plan – Is this the right investment for your child?

Published on Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 12:07 |  Source : Moneycontrol.com

Updated at Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 11:43  

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3
0
0
Share on Tumblr
Ramganesh Iyer

RELATED NEWS

Akshata and Vidhan Kulkarni's joy at getting their daughter admitted to kindergarten was tempered by a sudden realisation that they needed to start planning financially for her future. Vidhan had heard from his colleagues about how expensive even primary school education was getting, and he could not imagine how much college education would cost by the time his daughter completed school. He now began to pay more attention to the innumerable Child Plan commercials by life insurance companies that were regularly aired between the cricket matches on TV; and wondered how to choose. With these thoughts, he approached me to guide him in planning the way forward.

What is a Child Plan?
I began by explaining the basic concept of a child plan, as is available in the market today. It has typically two components to it

  • A life insurance on the parent
  • An investment vehicle that accumulates your savings on a regular basis and pays it back around the time the child reaches college (typically when she turns 18-21)

These two components are thus very different in what they achieve to secure the child's future, and any analysis must keep this distinction in mind at all times.

The Insurance Component
Life insurance in the child plan ensures that the monies payable to the child for higher education are protected against untimely death of the earning parent. I cannot overplay the importance of this insurance - in fact, my observation has been that most people underinsure their life in these policies.

By mandate, the minimum life cover that you have to opt for in a child plan is

                    Sum Assured = Term * Annual premium / 2

Thus, if you take an 18-year plan, paying Rs. 50,000 every year, the minimum life cover is Rs. 4.5 lakh. Now, if you have no other life insurance, a little bit of thinking would reveal to you that this life cover is woefully inadequate. After all, if you can afford to save Rs. 50,000 a year towards a single plan, it is likely that your annual income is atleast Rs. 5 lakh. Thus, the insurance for the child does not even cover one year of income!

Instead, one would recommend a life cover of atleast 7-10 times your annual take home pay, if not more. This provides adequate security and cover for your spouse and child to financially sustain in the event of your untimely demise.

Of course, you need not rely on a child plan to provide you this insurance. A term insurance plan of the required amount can be bought from any of the major life insurance players. Analysis reveals that the rates are much more competitive and customer friendly if done this way, rather than through a child plan.

The Investment Component
As mentioned earlier, the other function of a child plan is to enable you to save regularly and pay back the money (with returns) when the child is entering college. Here, it is important to note that the plan is simply a pass-through - it invests the money in a set of securities on your behalf, for a fee. The plan in itself does not have a mechanism to generate returns, let alone freebies. Depending on how the securities perform, the amount available to the child gets decided.

Thus, there is no such concept as a freebie here - any benefit that the plan offers you (flexibility to switch, loan facility, premature withdrawal, waiver of premium, etc) is paid for by you in full as part of the premium. For instance, if a college promises your child 'free laptops' after charging a fee of Rs. 10 lakh, you would recognise that the laptop is not really 'free'. All that the college is doing is allocating a portion of the fee to purchase laptops and distribute them. Similar is the case with additional features thrown in by insurance companies. Each feature has a cost that gets cut from your premium payment.

The investment can be either in debt securities (in the traditional plans) or in equity instruments (the unit linked plans). Given the strength of equities in the long term, any plan that is greater than 5-7 years in duration should be invested predominantly in equities. Else, it is likely that you will end up earning very low returns and not covering the inflation in education costs.

Of course, as in case of insurance, the alternative here is to invest in equity mutual funds instead of child plans. Analysis reveals that this (equity mutual fund) may actually be a much better option, since it has much lower transaction costs and is more flexible and liquid. Most child plans have upfront allocation charges in excess of 15%, as against only ~2% for mutual funds!

Putting it together
In summary, the child plans available today fare poorly on both the insurance and the investment parameters, as compared to alternatives available in the market. The term insurance beats the child plan hands down, while the mutual funds provide a lower cost way of investing the corpus.

 

Child Plans

 

Insurance

Investment

Rule of thumb Insure your life to atleast 7-10 times your annual income For tenures greater than 5-7 years, invest in equities (or unit linked plans); for lower tenures, invest in traditional schemes
Disadvantages of child plans People typically under-insure their lives. Upfront allocation charges are extremely high - most of these go to give high distributor commission
End up paying higher premiums.
Suggested alternative Opt for a term life insurance policy based on your income Invest systematically in diversified equity mutual funds

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes, these alternatives require somewhat of a more hands-on approach to financial planning. But given that it's your child's future that we are talking about, it is probably well worth it!

- Ramganesh Iyer

The author works with PARK Financial Advisors Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai. He may be contacted at info@parkfa.com.

For more Views by Experts click here 

  

Trending News

Business News

Apple will give out a free app a week; App Store will update
Reebok execs named in Rs 870 cr fraud denied anticipatory bail "Reebok execs named in Rs 870 cr fraud denied anticipatory bail"

Live Updates: KKR-CSK clash for IPL 5 title

Rel Comm Q4 Cons Net Revenue Up 5% At `5,310 Cr (QoQ)

The latest earning numbers FIRST on CNBC-TV18
Videos

May 25 2012, 22:26

NHPC posts profit amid capacity addition, delay woes

- in Results Boardroom

Interviews

May 27 2012, 11:52 | Source: CNBC-TV18

Expect to maintain EBIDTA margin ahead: Wockhardt  

May 27 2012, 11:00 | Source: CNBC-TV18

e-commerce market in India: What's in store?  

Subscribe to

Moneycontrol Newsletters

Moneycontrol.com offers you a choice of various sectoral and other newsletters for FREE!