How To Teach Your Teens Good Financial Habits
(NAPSI)-With a significant increase in
disposable income, in recent years teenagers have become an important
part of the consumer market. One statistic suggests that in 2001 alone
teenagers spent more than $124 billion. Despite this incredible spending
power, as few as 12 percent of high school students in the U.S. receive
a formal education in personal finance.
Parents can create their own "lesson
plans" at home to get teens financially fit. Leading consumer lender
Household (parent company of Household Finance Corp. and Beneficial)
offers the following advice to parents:
Give an allowance.
To instill financial responsibility and
to show that you trust them, offer your kids an allowance. The key to a
successful allowance is structuring it from the beginning. Make it clear
what kinds of purchases your kids can use the money for and that they
are expected to save some of it.
Set up a budget and manage spending.
To help your kids learn budgeting skills,
work with them first to identify all the ways they currently spend
money. Brainstorm together to choose the items they'd like to save for
and set manageable goals. Next, help them track their spending with a
budgeting worksheet or chart to make sure they stay on target to reach
their desired purchase. Finally, teach them how to conduct research to
find the best value before making a purchase.
Involve kids in household budgeting.
Get your children involved early on in
helping you make household spending decisions and involve them when you
pay your family's monthly bills. Make sure they understand the
consequences of making late payments or missing payments entirely.
Set up a savings account.
Taking into account money from jobs,
allowance, holiday and birthday gifts, help your kids determine their
monthly "income." Teach them to put away roughly 10 percent of this
amount as savings. Encourage your teens to open a savings account at a
bank, or store the money safely at home for them so they will not be
tempted to spend it.
Set a good example.
The sounder your own financial judgment,
the better your kids' may be. Demonstrating your own financially
responsible behavior, such as keeping a balanced checkbook, always
paying bills on time and sticking to a budget and savings plan, will
help reinforce good habits in your kids.
For additional advice on achieving
financial fitness, log on to
www.household.com and
www.yourcreditcounts.com. You can also write to Household (Corporate
Communications, 2700 Sanders Road, Prospect Heights, IL 60070-2799) for
complimentary booklets on how to manage credit, spending and savings.
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