Parents left high and dry after spending $600,000 on children
The Straits Times|October 06, 2024
Case a stark reminder parents must plan for themselves first before overindulging offspring
Tan Ooi Boon
Parents left high and dry after spending $600,000 on children

Most parents want to do the best for their children, but a couple here are enduring retirement with money woes after splashing out around $600,000 on their children's overseas education.

Their plight is a stark reminder that parents must make plans for themselves first before overindulging their offspring.

Their determination to give their children a first-class education has left them so cash-strapped that they even had to fight in the High Court over a mere $600 monthly payment linked to the settlement they made when they divorced about 10 years ago.

To make matters worse, their son, 33, said to be still studying for a doctorate in the United States earlier this year, and daughter, 29, who graduated from a London university, appear to have broken off contact with their parents over the past two years and have not helped them out financially.

The father, who is 65 and retired, has a young child from his second marriage and had been paying $1,200 a month to his former wife, 69.

But he asked to halve this sum because his own household expenses, which probably include mortgage repayment, came to about $7,000.

He had $500,000 in his CPF and other savings, but this may not be enough in the long term, noting that his new wife, 38, would also need to find work as a tutor to supplement their expenses.

It was not known what assets his former wife got in their divorce settlement, but she objected to the request to cut her alimony to just $600 as she could no longer work due to a spinal condition.

Yet even as late as 2023, the father continued to remit about $26,000 to his son in the US, while his wife gave about $14,000.

When this unusual case was heard in the High Court in May 2024, Justice Choo Han Teck asked the parents to provide more details about their savings, given that they could still send substantial sums of money to their son.

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