Teaching Money Management at an Early Age
By Kendra Dahlstrom, published Feb 21, 2007
Published Content: 299 Total Views: 233,344 Favorited By: 22 CPs
Begin Young
Very young children can begin learning the concept of saving money and spending money. As early as kindergarten and first grade, small amounts of money are completely acceptable for an allowance. The earlier you begin teaching money management, the quicker it will become a routine in their young lives.
Set Ground Rules
Before you begin giving your children an allowance, make sure they understand the ground rules. Sit down with them and discuss how much money they will be getting and where it will go. For example, If you give a 6 year old 3 dollars a week, let him/her know that you would like $1 to go towards charity, $1 to go into savings, and $1 is free to spend as he/she would like. Be sure they see all three dollars before putting them into different "funds" each week. It lets them see their money and where it is going. Be sure to keep them involved in the decision making. For instance, let your child decide which charity to donate to, or what he/she would like to spend his/her own money buying. The more involved you make them, the more excited they will become.
Early Payday
One tip for beginning an allowance is to make the payday early in the week. This teaches the child to save his/her money and think about what they want to spend it on throughout the week. If you give them their allowance on the weekend, it will be gone right away. Money management and money willpower will be created by distributing allowance on a Monday or Tuesday.
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