海角大神

Allowance tricks to teach your kids

Allowance can be a good tool to teach your kids about money management. Consider requiring them to divide their allowance into spending, saving, investing, and giving categories. 

|
Brittany Lynne Photography
Setting up money jars for your kids where they divide their allowance between spending, saving, investing, and donating can be an effective way to teach budgeting and personal finance, Hamm suggests.

Each week, my children receive a small allowance. It鈥檚 not tied to any chores; instead, it鈥檚 mostly a tool to teach them about money management.

We pay them in quarters, with each child receiving twice the number of quarters as their age. So, a five year old would receive ten quarters, a three year old would receive six quarters, and so on.

When each child has turned four, we鈥檝e started having them segment their allowance into four different groupings. At a minimum, they鈥檙e required to put one quarter in each of the four segments (after age eight, two quarters is the minimum).

The four segments are spending, saving, investing, and giving.

The spending segment is just like it sounds: they can spend it on whatever they like, within reason. This money goes for short term wants like trading cards or other such things.

The saving segment involves them picking a specific savings goal, then putting aside their money in that segment until they have enough to buy it (usually along with money in the 鈥渟pending鈥 segment). This usually ends up being savings for a larger toy, like a Nintendo DS.补听

The investing portion is a long-term savings that won鈥檛 be touched until they鈥檙e at least sixteen, but with it they get to see the power of long-term saving and compound interest. So far, we鈥檙e just letting this segment build and talking about how much is in there, but eventually we鈥檒l put it in a bank and perhaps invest it in other things.

The giving portion is just that: it鈥檚 given to a charity of their choosing once a year or so. We like to focus on charities where they can, in some direct way, see the good their money is doing, but they have the final decision about what charity to aid. We usually present several options to them, talk about each one, and they choose one.

We鈥檝e been using the Money Savvy Pig for this separation (it made for a wonderful fourth birthday gift for our oldest and our middle child), but you can certainly replicate this scheme with four jars. You can also make up your own divisions and assign your own rules to it 鈥 whatever works for you.

The reason behind giving an allowance and segmenting is because, in the end, this is a budget. Segmenting an allowance means budgeting. They鈥檙e learning that when their income comes in, there are good reasons to split it up and to save some of it for the future. You should spend less than you earn in any given week, because if you do that, you鈥檒l have money for other things later on.

This technique lets children see personal finance at work in a very tangible way in their own lives, which is the best way to make it real for them. There鈥檚 no abstraction at all. They feel the physical quarters, they see them in the jars, they get to make the choices as to how to spend them, they see the benefits of those choices.

Not only that, it gives you (as a family) an opportunity every week to talk a little bit about good personal finance practices, and that little chat can often be just as much of a motivator toward good behavior for the parents as it is for the children.

This post is part of a yearlong series called 鈥365 Ways to Live Cheap (Revisited),鈥 in which I鈥檓 revisiting the entries from my book 鈥365 Ways to Live Cheap,鈥 which is available at Amazon and at bookstores everywhere. 聽

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Allowance tricks to teach your kids
Read this article in
/Business/The-Simple-Dollar/2012/0321/Allowance-tricks-to-teach-your-kids
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe