| Brought to you by National PTAŽ
by Paul Richard
Introducing Kids to Money
Money gives people -- both young and old --
decision-making opportunities. Educating,
motivating, and empowering children to become
regular savers and investors will enable them
to keep more of the money they earn and do
more with the money they spend. Everyday
spending decisions can have a far more
negative impact on children's financial
futures than any investment decisions they may
ever make. Here are 15 simple ways to help
educate children about personal finance and
managing money:
- As soon as children can count,
introduce them to money. Take an
active role in providing them with
information. Observation and repetition
are two important ways children learn.
- Communicate with children as they
grow about your values concerning money
--- how to save it, how to make it grow,
and most importantly, how to spend it
wisely.
- Help children learn the differences
between needs, wants, and wishes. This
will prepare them for making good spending
decisions in the future.
- Setting goals is fundamental to
learning the value of money and saving.
Young or old, people rarely reach goals
they haven't set. Nearly every toy or
other item children ask their parents to
buy them can become the object of a
goal-setting session. Such goal-setting
helps children learn to become responsible
for themselves.
- Introduce children to the value of
saving versus spending. Explain and
demonstrate the concept of earning
interest income on savings. Consider
paying interest on money children save at
home; children can help calculate the
interest and see how fast money
accumulates through the power of compound
interest. Later on, they also will realize
that the quickest way to a good credit
rating is a history of regular, successful
savings. Some parents even offer to match
what children save on their own.
Allowance and Spending Decisions
- When giving children an
allowance, give them the money in
denominations that encourage saving.
If the amount is $5, give them 5-1-dollar
bills and encourage that at least one
dollar be set aside in savings. (Saving $5
a week at 6 percent interest compounded
quarterly will total about $266 after a
year, $1,503 after 5 years, and $3,527
after 10 years!)
- Take children to a credit union or
bank to open their own savings accounts.
Beginning the regular savings habit early
is one of the keys to savings success.
Remember, don't refuse them when they want
to withdraw a portion of their savings for
a purchase--This may discourage them from
saving at all. You can also introduce
children to U.S. savings bonds. Bonds are
still a good value, costing one-half their
face value and earning interest that in
some instances will be tax-free if used
for a college education. Perhaps more
importantly, when given as a gift, bonds
will not be spent immediately, reinforcing
saving and goal-setting lessons.
- Keeping good records of money saved,
invested, or spent is another important
skill young people must learn. To make
it easy, use 12 envelopes, 1 for each
month, with a larger envelope to hold all
the envelopes for the year. Establish this
system for each child. Encourage children
to place receipts from all purchases in
the envelopes and keep notes on what they
do with their money.
- Use regular shopping trips as
opportunities to teach children the value
of money. Going to the grocery store
is often a child's first spending
experience. About a third of our take-home
pay is spent on grocery and household
items. Spending smarter at the grocery
store (using coupons, shopping sales,
comparing unit prices) can save more than
$1,800 a year for a family of four. To
help young people understand this lesson,
demonstrate how to plan economical meals,
avoid waste, and use leftovers
efficiently. When you take children to
other kinds of stores, explain how to plan
purchases in advance and make unit-price
comparisons. Show them how to check for
value, quality, repairability, warranty,
and other consumer concerns. Spending
money can be fun and very productive when
spending is well-planned. Unplanned
spending, as a rule, usually results in
20-30 percent of our money being wasted
because we obtain poor value with our
purchases.
- Allow young people to make spending
decisions. Whether good or poor, they
will learn from their spending choices.
You can then initiate an open discussion
of spending pros and cons before more
spending takes place. Encourage them to
use common sense when buying. This means
doing research before making major
purchases, waiting for the right time to
buy, and using the
"spending-by-choice" technique.
This technique involves selecting at least
three other things the money could be
spent on setting aside money for one of
the items, and then making a choice of
which item to purchase.
Buying Smart
- Show children how to
evaluate TV, radio, and print ads for
products. Will a product really
perform and do what the commercials say?
Is a price offered truly a sale price? Are
alternative products available that will
do a better job, perhaps for less cost, or
offer better value? Remind them that if
something sounds too good to be true, it
usually is.
- Alert children to the dangers of
borrowing and paying interest. If you
charge interest on small loans you make to
them, they will learn quickly how
expensive it is to rent someone else's
money for a specified period of time. For
instance, paying for a $499 TV over 18
months at $31.85 a month at 18.8 percent
interest means the buyer really pays about
$575.
- When using a credit card at a
restaurant, take the opportunity to teach
children about how credit cards work.
Explain to children how to verify the
charges, how to calculate the tip, and how
to guard against credit card fraud.
- Be cautious about making credit cards
available to young people, even when they
are entering college. Credit cards
have a message: "spend!" Some
students report using the cards for cash
advances and also to meet everyday needs,
instead of for emergencies (as originally
planned). Many of those same students find
themselves having to cut back on classes
to fit in part-time jobs just to pay for
their credit card purchases.
- Establish a regular schedule for
family discussions about finances. This is
especially helpful to younger children--it
can be the time when they tote up their
savings and receive interest. Other
discussion topics should include the
difference between cash, checks, and
credit cards; wise spending habits; how to
avoid the use of credit; and the
advantages of saving and investment
growth. With teenagers, it's also useful
to discuss what's happening with the
national and local economies, how to
economize at home, and alternatives to
spending money. All of this information
will be important as they take on more
responsibility for their own financial
well-being.
Adapted from "Dollars and Sense,"
in the April 1999 issue of Our Children,
the official magazine of the National PTAŽ.
Paul Richard is executive vice president of
the National Center for Finance Education (NCFE),
a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping
people learn to manage money.
|