Advertisement

firehouse pizza banner

Use Allowances to Teach Financial Lessons

Most young people learn about money management by observing their parents’ saving and spending habits. Allowances are a great way for you to give your young person a hands-on lesson in money management.

You may already have an allowance system in place, but if not, you can determine a reasonable weekly rate your young person can earn by helping out around the house or assign monetary values to specific chores, such as $1 for taking out the trash, $2 for cleaning their room, etc.

Once you have established an allowance system, talk to your youth about ways they can spend it. You can encourage them to open a checking or savings account with the money they earn and set aside a specific amount to go into a bank account each pay period.  Teach them how to make a deposit and to balance a checkbook or savings register.

Allow young people to control the money they earn. They can “blow it,” but if they do, resist the urge to give them more money when they want something else. This is a good opportunity to teach them about wants versus needs. As long as you are providing for their needs, they can save up for their wants.

Often as youth age, their wants grow in price. Teach your young person how to use their allowance, birthday money and other earned income to save toward a specific financial goal. Make sure they know how to set SMART financial goals. SMART is an acronym for specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and timed. By going through the process, youth learn how to state their goals, figure out how to achieve them, the amount of time it will take and why they want a specific item. Remember young people often appreciate an item more if they have had to work for it, compared to one they were given.             

      For more information, contact the Butler Cooperative Extension Service at 112 E GL Smith Street, Morgantown or call 270-526-3767.

              Educational programs of Kentucky Cooperative Extension serve all people regardless of economic or social status and will not discriminate on the basis of race, color, ethnic origin, national origin, creed, religion, political belief, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, marital status, genetic information, age, veteran status, or physical or mental disability.

  By: Tracy M. Cowles, Extension Agent for Family and Consumer Sciences

Source: Jennifer Hunter, Interim Assistant Director of Family and Consumer Sciences Extension

 

 

Tags: 


Bookmark and Share

Advertisements