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The
following set of questions
and answers is an interview I recently
gave to a children's
magazine. Although my financial commentary
is normally aimed in a different direction,
the questions were challenging
and my answers seem appropriate for any
adult audience. As you read my responses,
youre invited to think of the youngsters
in your life, as you consider how you
might interact so to be of help.
Q.
Why is it important to instill sound money
management principles in children?
A.
The question answers itself. As we strive
to establish other good habits
in our youth, we must not ignore a vital
ingredient: financial awareness. Many
children grow to adulthood, devoid of
an ability to handle money.
The miseries that follow such a failing
are indescribable.
Q.
What can parents do to teach their children
about money?
A.
There are four things.
Begin
your indoctrination early:
Recall the ancient adage: As the twig
is bent, so grows the tree. As soon as
your progeny develop awareness, theyre
entitled to instruction and guidance on
the realities of the financial world.
Mean
what you say:
You must display financial soundness.
Whether or not you believe it, your children
really pay attention to what you say and
do. As the first authority that normally
appears, a parent becomes a model on which
the child fixates.
Avoid
spontaneous gift-giving:
Though generosity
may seem a fine quality, it can become
inhibiting. One characteristic that builds
financial self-confidence
is an ability to establish and function
on a budget. Dont throw a monkey
wrench into the works by impulsively dumping
extra money into their hands.
Dont
direct your childs discretionary
spending:
If a child is to learn
about money,
he or she must sense some meaningful connection
to it. Though the parents should advise
their offspring on sensible spending and
saving, they must not dictate how the
youths handle their earnings. The decision
on how money received is to be spent..
or horded, if thats the choice..
is that of the recipient.
Q.
Are there any outside programs that can
help ensure children establish a sound
financial footing?
A.
Except within the family,
there are only two sources of indoctrination
for children: the school
room and the television screen. Consider
the classroom. Whatever praise or criticism
you may direct at the American public
school system, one thing must be acknowledged:
The handling of personal financial affairs
is not a subject to which much attention
is devoted. Whatever the average American
knows about handling money did not originate
there. This is understandable, of course,
if only because the typical classroom
teacher is equally mystified by the world
of money. The second possibility, television,
offers a variety of childrens programs
billed as educational. Im convinced
that theres no information to be
gleaned from the media. Those formative
years, in which the average child spends
28 hours per week in front of a television
screen, does little more than inculcate
a taste for Pop Tarts, Cocoa Puffs, Hip-Hop
music, designer jeans, and the emulation
of celebrities.
Q.
Do you believe schools do a good job of
getting children ready for the real-world
in the sense of fundamental responsibility?
A.
I briefly touched on this, but will expand
on it a bit. Here in the first decade
of the 21st Century, a lot of things go
on in the classroom. The subjects on which
my attention was focused many decades
ago.. reading, writing, and arithmetic..
is but a small portion of what is now
stressed as vital. Monitoring relations
between individuals and groups is a paramount
concern. The fairness of governmental
actions is debated at all levels. Improper
speech is an obsession. To stifle the
natural energy of children which can be
distracting to professional educators,
many schools resort to designating students,
particularly boys, as suffering from Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD), for which drugs such
as Ritalin are administered. Its
little wonder that money handling receives
short shrift in the classroom.
Q.
Do you believe theres a connection
between future financial success and early
money management?
A.
Without a doubt. The 16-year-old, with
no borrowing ability, who figures a way
to stretch $500 to acquire $1,000 in desired
audio equipment, will become the young
adult who scrutinizes the investment
market carefully to invest his spare $5,000
per year. Learning not to be taken advantage
of early on will carry over, to help avoid
the deceptively-designed and grotesquely-hyped
scams to which the majority of Americans
regularly succumb.
Q.
How is it that many parents raise children
that arent financially responsible?
A.
This deserves an entire book. Understand
that many parents are themselves incapable
of conducting their own financial lives.
Why, then, should we expect them to raise
children in a responsible
manner? Its reported, that 95% of
persons reach retirement age unable to
provide for themselves without outside
financial assistance. Perhaps their parents
a half-century ago neglected to properly
rear them, and it repeats with each successive
generation. If theres one common
mistake, it is an inability of many parents
to properly regulate their own financial
lives by which, through precept and example,
they might convey these principles to
their progeny.
Q.
How might children with a curiosity about
finances pursue knowledge on the subject
without parents?
A.
Unfortunately, with difficulty. Prior
to the age of about twelve the average
child lacks exposure to finances, except
for whatever involvement the parent or
guardian generates. Most have no money-making
opportunities.
Circumstances today are different than
long ago. During the Depression years
in Minnesota, no enforceable child labor
laws existed. Before my tenth birthday
I mowed lawns in the summer and shoveled
sidewalks in the winter. I recall that
my parents exhibited thrift.. by necessity..
and I developed a similar bent.
About
all thats available today to indoctrinate
children into the world of money are programs
designed and sponsored by investment firms.
Two examples are the JumpStart Coalition,
originated in 1995 by the Merrill Lynch
Foundation, and Investing Lessons for
Kids, operated by the Youth Investing
Committee, National Association of Investors
Corporation (NAJC). However, as with most
such programs, the stress is institutional
advertising
for customers, not meaningful financial
instruction.
So
without parents input, I dont
see a happy ending.
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