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Edited on Sun Feb-01-09 04:02 PM by Mike 03
I apologize for wasting everybody's time with that stupid post.
You guys were right: that figure is absurd. Sometimes preposterous things sound so believeable when you hear them on an All-News radio station you have listened to for years. I'm ashamed I believed that (impossible) figure. After I'd made that post, when I was contemplatin it, I recognized it had to be bogus unless they were including the medical costs that will probably be necessary to take care of these particular kids (the octuplets) because of their premature status and some of the medical issues that often accompany being born this prematurely. But I doubt that is the case; it is more likely, as you suggested, they misplaced a decimal point. But still, that is hard to believe that a reporter could be so reckless.
KNX, the radio station that issued this as 'fact' probably realized this was an impossible figure and that is most likely why I'm unable to locate the podcast, and unlike other "reports" like this one, they did not re-run it overnight. I was hoping to record it so I could transcribe it directly.
By the same token, $250,000 sounds way too low. Isn't that figure over ten years old?
Also, what is the definition of "raise a child?" Maybe providing the very bare necessities like food (I ate like a fucking horse when I was a teenager; it was a disgrace) and clothing, you could squeak by, but what about ancillary costs such as:
Health insurance Telecommunications like separate phones, cable bills, cell phones if you are the kind of parent who believes the children should have these Moving to a larger house because you need bedrooms now that you have kids--needing more space! Then, when you have more space, it costs more to heat and cool it. Not just feeding them, but feeding them healthfully and well All the other stuff that kids need to participate in extra-curricular activities, like sports equipment, supplies for elective classes, a good computer (which has become a necessity)
And them some of the biggies, like:
Buying them a car or a used car Saving up for them to go to college.
This is where I have trouble believing the $250,000 figure. If you send your kid to a good university nowadays, you can easily spend over a hundred thousand right there for room/board, tuition, textbooks, gas, and some money for discretionary spending.
Just as a shot in the dark, if you include the car and college--and attempting to control for inflation--I would have to make a wild guess that it would cost somewhere between $500,000 and $700,000 to raise a kid born in 2009.
But I'm laughing heartily at myself for believing that $2.5 million figure and the notion that this woman in Los Angeles will need $35 million to raise these fourteen children.
You guys were right. That is a preposterous assertion.
ON EDIT
Just a thought. I wonder if the cost of raising each child is exponential in the sense that raising one child costs X amount, but if you have two, three, etc.., the cost of raising each child is X+(some number) as the basic needs for a larger house, larger car, etc become more manifest.
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