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Home Page » Family & Home » Parenting
 

What Kids Buy-With Allowance, You Can Teach Positive Saving and Spending Habits

 

Its an all too common scenario:

Child says, I want that. Mom replies, I dont have any money. Child, trying to be helpful, quickly replies, Thats OK, just use your card.

Unfortunately, the child in this story usually equates swiping the plasticwhether a credit card or ATM cardwith free money. Without realizing it, many moms are teaching their children to become future spendaholics. How? By overusing the credit cardand by acting like their childrens personal ATM machine.

What kids buy with their allowance teaches them good, solid financial principles that will stick with them the rest of their lives. However, what kids buy with your money (or with your credit card, as the case may be) does little to develop their understanding of sound spending and saving habits.

What Kids Buy with AllowanceAnd Why Parents Give Allowance in the First Place

What is an allowance for, anyways? An allowance should be given to promote healthy money management. It should not be given as compensation for chores. Chores are an everyday part of being a member of the family. The praise and thanks for completing chores is remuneration enough.

Some parents might ask, Why give kids money for free? Good question! But the fact of the matter is, you already do give them money for free by doling out cash for treats, clothes, games, toys, booksyou get the picture. Even without an allowance, youre still giving your kids money for free.

And this is why an allowance is so great: it allows you to keep the spending on your children in check (actually saving you money!) while teaching them valuable life skills at the same time. Allowance shifts a lot of the spending decisions to your childrenand what kids buy with their allowance teaches them practical financial lessons that last.

This doesnt mean taking a 100% hands-off approach to your childs spending habits. Instead, it calls you to help teach them the basics of finances so they can go on to manage money on their own. It requires you to set up guidelines for how much money they can save and how much money they can spend. Then, after the financial foundation is laid, what kids buy with allowance is up to them.

Can You Control What Kids Buy with Allowance?

On page 178 of my book When Youre About To Go Off the Deep End, Dont Take Your Kids With You, I discuss a money management plan that both kids and parents can appreciate and enjoy. I call it piggy banking with a twist, and heres how it works.

In order to start receiving an allowance, your child simply has to agree to use the piggy banking with a twist system. Instead of having one piggy bank, you want them to have four!

The four piggy banks and their purposes are:

1. Super Savings Pig This is your childs long-term savings. As money accumulates over time in this bank, your child will learn the benefits of delayed gratification.

2. Play Dough Pig This is your childs fun money. It is to be spent on a weekly basis for immediate gratification stuff like candy, small trinkets, or whatever they want!

3. Grand Goal Pig This pig helps your child save toward a specific goal, usually a special toy they really want. Many moms report that their kids take far better care of the toys they have bought with their own money than the ones theyve been given. What kids buy with allowance gives them a sense of pride, accomplishment and ownership.

4. Kind Charity Pig This account helps instill the value of giving to others. Get your children involved by discussing and visiting various charities and letting them decide where their donations go. And when your children are ready to make their donations, ensure they are the ones who mail or hand-deliver themnot you.

How much should go toward each pig? Most kids find it easiest to put 25% in each account. Older children can flex these guidelines a bit, but a good rule of thumb is to put at least 10% toward charity and another 10% toward savings.

You Bought What?!
What kids buy with allowance will often seem like plain ole junk to you. Sometimes your children will want a cheap toy that you know will break shortly after they purchase it. Or maybe they want candy that you would rather they didnt have.

The best thing to do in these situations is to allow your children the experience without any interference from you. The natural consequence of having the toy break is a wonderful learning opportunity. When it comes to candy, whatever junk food is not allowed at all is what they will want even more. So allow your children to spend their play dough money as they wish. This is a form of respect and can teach your children how to spend wisely.

In the end, what kids buy with allowance is more than material goods. As you implement an allowance system and stick to it, you will be teaching your children valuable lessonslessons about how to spend, how to save, and how to do both wisely.

Author: Kelly Nault
 
Author Bio:

Kelly Nault

Kelly Nault is the award-winning author of the book, "When You're About To Go Off The Deep End, Don't Take Your Kids With You." Kelly loves kids! This is why she motivates moms to put themselves first--so they have more to give their children. She is the founder of Ultimate Parent, a company that provides parenting resources such as the "Mommy Moments" free online parenting course.

Kelly?s contagious zest-for-life, and effective communication strategies have helped thousands of families to bring out their best. As a popular and entertaining media guest across North America, she is regularly quoted for such articles as "Psst! Children Secretly Like Chores" and regularly facilitates workshops for parents, corporate audiences, and colleges.

After receiving her Master?s in Counseling Psychology, Kelly completed a pre-doctoral internship and became the "go-to person" for emotionally, and mentally challenged children that other professionals have given up on. Early in her career, Kelly co-parented two violent, blind brothers for whom the community had lost hope. It was in this long-term position that she tested and disseminated the advice of leading parenting experts into her own brand of practical and effective Ultimate Parent tactics that work for common family struggles. Kelly?s approach to parenting is time-tested, child-proofed and effective in decreasing conflict while accelerating the ability for each family member to reach and fulfill their maximum potential.

This article can be searched using: single parenting, parenting advice, parenting information, teen parenting, parenting tips
 
 
 

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