disneysteve
DIS meet junkie
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2002
- Messages
- 16,200
This is so important. Teaching your kids about money is great, but if they hear you say one thing and then see you do something else, guess which one they will emulate.dvcgirl said:We learned by observation mostly. Our parents didn't just "talk the talk", the walked the walk....
Years ago when I was a kid, financial education just wasn't as important because the world was a different place. Credit card use wasn't so ingrained. The banking and credit industries hadn't been deregulated yet so all the predatory stuff we see today (check cashing stores, payday loans, refund anticipation loans, subpar lenders) weren't around. It was much harder to get into trouble compared with today.
Also, most Americans didn't do much investing outside of banks and US savings bonds. Stock ownership was a fraction of what it is today. People didn't have IRAs, ROTHs, 401Ks, etc. The mutual fund industry had a few hundred funds, not the thousands there are today. So education is much more important because there is so much more to know.
But MrsPete is right. Many parents aren't teaching their kids about finances because they don't know the stuff themselves. If you don't feel that you know enough to teach your kids, start by educating yourself. Start reading Money magazine and some general finance books that we are all always recommending. There are also some great books for teaching your kids. I recently read "The First National Bank of Dad" which I thought was a good one.