Helping Kids To Be Good With Money

Helping Kids To Be Good With Money

15 Things A Personal Finance Expert Suggests Parents Do To Help Their Kids Be Good With Money

Thu, October 28, 2021,

I like to imagine I was raised to be financially intelligent (thanks ma and pa) but now that I have a kid of my own, I was curious what an expert had to say about raising kids to be good with money.

I write about personal finance and money, so you'd hope I have it together — and for the most part, I think I do. I owe my love of saving money and my abhorrence of debt to my parents who set me up with a bank account at birth, had me get a job as soon as it was legal, and made me save up for the dumb plastic toys I thought I just had to have.

So I chatted with Beth Kobliner, the New York Times bestselling author of Make Your Kid a Money Genius (Even If You're Not).   Sometimes you've gotta pull out the big guns.

Here are her tips:

1. Start talking about money early on.

There's a lot of shame, stress, and worry surrounding money, so it makes sense that many parents shy away from the topic. But Kobliner says that to raise financially intelligent kids, you'll want to start talking about money early on.

"And not only should it be early, but financial education also needs to be ongoing. Here’s why: A study out of the University of Wisconsin showed that by age 3, children can grasp basic economic concepts such as value and exchange. And a University of Cambridge survey found that by age 7, many of the habits that help kids manage their money are already set."

There's a lot of shame, stress, and worry surrounding money, so it makes sense that many parents shy away from the topic. But Kobliner says that to raise financially intelligent kids, you'll want to start talking about money early on.

"And not only should it be early, but financial education also needs to be ongoing. Here’s why: A study out of the University of Wisconsin showed that by age 3, children can grasp basic economic concepts such as value and exchange. And a University of Cambridge survey found that by age 7, many of the habits that help kids manage their money are already set."

2.  Show them how money works and teach them the difference between wants and needs.

The act of trading money for goods and services will be completely foreign to them. They may literally think money, and the things it buys, grows on trees.

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/15-ways-parents-help-kids-194602014.html

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