Current:Home > StocksBetter late than never: teach your kids good financial lessons -FundSphere
Better late than never: teach your kids good financial lessons
View
Date:2025-04-25 20:45:02
Parents spend many years reviewing their children's report cards. A recent study essentially turned the tables on that, with young adults reviewing their parents' performances, particularly in regard to financial matters. The findings weren't good: Gen Z (people between ages 12 and 27) is the least financially confident generation, and a third of them say their parents didn't set a good example for them.
There's a reason for the parents' poor performance and a reason why young people should feel more confident about their financial futures.
Why many parents set poor examples
Before you blame your parents for not helping you get savvier, financially, put yourselves in their shoes. You might be lamenting that your school never taught you much about money, but your parents likely got even less financial schooling.
According to a 2023 Edward Jones survey, 80% of respondents said they never learned money skills in school. So, like most folks their age, your parents were just doing the best they could.
Many ended up deep in debt or facing other financial troubles, often without realizing how dangerous it is to overuse a credit card and how debt at high-interest rates can balloon over time.
How parents today can set good examples
Here's what your parents might have done had they known more about financial matters, and what you might do with your own kids now or whenever you have them:
- Talk about money frequently – your financial goals, your financial challenges, how you're overcoming those challenges, your smartest and dumbest financial moves, etc.
- Show them your household budget and help them learn how much things cost.
- Have them watch you shop in stores, online, wherever; talk about how you're choosing to spend your money and point out when you decide to postpone or cancel a planned purchase.
- Show them how to have fun without spending a lot of money, such as by hiking, playing board games, reading, playing sports with friends, and so on.
- At the right time, start discussing the power of long-term investing in stocks. Show them how they might become millionaires one day if they save and invest.
- If you're an investor (and most of us should be since Social Security will not be enough to provide a comfortable retirement), let them see you investing. Talk about the investments you choose and why you choose them. Perhaps talk about companies of interest together. Eventually, help them start investing, too.
Basically, you want them to grow up fully aware of financial matters and of how to manage money sensibly.
Meet the millionaires next door.These Americans made millions out of nothing.
Why young people have a lot to be confident about
Finally, no matter how much they've learned or not learned from their parents, young people don't necessarily have to despair over their financial futures, because those futures can be quite bright. Why? Simply because young people have a lot of something that's vital to wealth building, something that most of us have much less of – and that's time.
Check out the table below, which shows how money can grow over time. It assumes 8% average-annual growth, though no one knows exactly how quickly the market will grow over any particular period. In the past, it has averaged close to 10% over many decades.
Source: Calculations by author.
Young people should see that once they're earning money, if they can regularly invest meaningful amounts, they can amass significant sums, which can help them reach all kinds of goals, such as a reliable car, fully-paid home, supporting a family, enjoying a comfortable retirement, and so on.
You – and young people you know – would do well to take some time to learn more about investing. And then teach others.
The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
The Motley Fool is a USA TODAY content partner offering financial news, analysis and commentary designed to help people take control of their financial lives. Its content is produced independently of USA TODAY.
The $22,924 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook
Offer from the Motley Fool: If you're like most Americans, you're a few years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But a handful of little-known "Social Security secrets" could help ensure a boost in your retirement income. For example: one easy trick could pay you as much as $22,924 more... each year! Once you learn how to maximize your Social Security benefits, we think you could retire confidently with the peace of mind we're all after. Simply click here to discover how to learn more about these strategies.
View the "Social Security secrets" ›
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Olympic women's basketball bracket: Schedule, results, Team USA's path to gold
- 2024 Olympics: Why Simone Biles Was Stressing While Competing Against Brazilian Gymnast Rebeca Andrade
- 'Depraved monster': Ex-FBI agent, Alabama cop sentenced to life in child sex-abuse case
- Swimmer Tamara Potocka under medical assessment after collapsing following race
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Ground cinnamon products added to FDA health alert, now 16 with elevated levels of lead
- Judge overturns $4.7 billion jury award to NFL Sunday Ticket subscribers
- Swimmer Tamara Potocka collapses after a women’s 200-meter individual medley race at the Olympics
- The 'Rebel Ridge' trailer is here: Get an exclusive first look at Netflix movie
- Books similar to 'Verity' by Colleen Hoover: Read these twisty romantic thrillers next
Ranking
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- Increasing wind and heat plus risk of thunderstorms expected in fight against California wildfire
- Taylor Swift explains technical snafu in Warsaw, Poland, during acoustic set
- For Marine Species Across New York Harbor, the Oyster Is Their World
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Florida-bound passengers evacuated at Ohio airport after crew reports plane has mechanical issue
- Did Katie Ledecky win? How she finished in 800 freestyle
- Florida braces for flooding from a possible tropical storm
Recommendation
A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
World record watch? USA hurdler Grant Holloway seeks redemption in Paris
IOC: Female boxers were victims of arbitrary decision by International Boxing Association
Hyundai recalls nearly 50,000 of its newer models for airbag issues
Judge says Mexican ex-official tried to bribe inmates in a bid for new US drug trial
Billie Eilish and Charli XCX Dance on Pile of Underwear in NSFW Guess Music Video
2024 Olympics: Sha'Carri Richardson Makes Epic Comeback 3 Years After Suspension
Kremlin acknowledges intelligence operatives among the Russians who were freed in swap