Prime,
I have a decent head on my shoulders but the average prime member has me beat in the wisdom category.
My younger brother is in his early 20's and has one semester of college left. A clueless tourist in a volvo ran a red light and likely totaled his 2007 civic; he'll get $8-9k for it. I'm considering loaning/giving him ~3k so he can get something fairly new and reliable. 5 years ago 8-9k was a fantastic used car, now it gets you a 5-6 year old import with 90-100k on it. He doesn't have much savings and his part time job doesn't pay much.
For friends I quickly learned not to loan anyone money - simply give it to them and hope they pay it back. Otherwise every time they go out and waste $50 at a bar it will annoy the hell out of you. I have a buddy who thinks I "loaned" him $100 that has spent $500 at bars since I gave him the money (not coincidence of course).
I don't think giving him the money is the right approach. My grand mother gave him the civic and his college expenses have been covered ($0 spending money though, he's worked part time throughout college).
Don't worry, my family doesn't hate me; my grand father died when my brother started college (and I graduated) that set money aside for education.
How can I create the most value through this agreement? I considered tying it to grades or using it to motivate him to get an internship, etc. $500 reduction in principle if all A's? No interest if he gets a job prior to graduation? Any suggestions or am I wasting my mental energy?
I have a decent head on my shoulders but the average prime member has me beat in the wisdom category.
My younger brother is in his early 20's and has one semester of college left. A clueless tourist in a volvo ran a red light and likely totaled his 2007 civic; he'll get $8-9k for it. I'm considering loaning/giving him ~3k so he can get something fairly new and reliable. 5 years ago 8-9k was a fantastic used car, now it gets you a 5-6 year old import with 90-100k on it. He doesn't have much savings and his part time job doesn't pay much.
For friends I quickly learned not to loan anyone money - simply give it to them and hope they pay it back. Otherwise every time they go out and waste $50 at a bar it will annoy the hell out of you. I have a buddy who thinks I "loaned" him $100 that has spent $500 at bars since I gave him the money (not coincidence of course).
I don't think giving him the money is the right approach. My grand mother gave him the civic and his college expenses have been covered ($0 spending money though, he's worked part time throughout college).
Don't worry, my family doesn't hate me; my grand father died when my brother started college (and I graduated) that set money aside for education.
How can I create the most value through this agreement? I considered tying it to grades or using it to motivate him to get an internship, etc. $500 reduction in principle if all A's? No interest if he gets a job prior to graduation? Any suggestions or am I wasting my mental energy?