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By Odysseas Papadimitriou, CEO of Card Hub, a leading online marketplace for both secured and unsecured credit cards
Consider for a second your financial youth. Did you have someone to teach you not only the value of a hard-earned dollar, but also how to correctly manage all of the dollars you accumulated in order to ensure financial security later in life? Or, was your financial literacy gleaned from a trial by fire?
Judging by the widespread overleveraging and risky lending that led to the Great Recession and the increases in consumer debt that we have seen since the country emerged from it, many of us still don’t have a firm grasp on what it takes to be fiscally responsible. And since we don’t want our children to make the same mistakes we have or endure widespread financial struggles during their adult lives, it’s important that we instill within them at a young age things like the tents of responsible credit use, the basics of investing and lending, and how to plan for retirement.
“Ok,” you might be thinking, “but that’s easier said than done, right?”
It sure is, but you need to start somewhere, and that somewhere is a prepaid card, interestingly enough. Prepaid cards have traditionally served two primary purposes: acting as alternatives to traditional checking accounts for people who misused these traditional accounts in the past and helping young people on the road to financial literacy.
Prepaid cards are particularly well-suited to this latter end for a number of reasons, including:
Still, a prepaid card itself won’t help your child learn. You need to implement an allowance system to truly hammer home the consequences of wild spending and the need for budgets. While the details of each family’s system will differ, they should all follow this basic framework:
When your child masters prepaid card use, give his or her allowance in cash in order to teach the importance of keeping track of physical money, which obviously cannot be monitored by parents. After that, open a checking account in your child’s name, opt-in for the ability to overdraw the account, and use that as an opportunity to teach the importance of not using money you don’t have. Lastly, co-sign for a college student credit card and teach the tents of managing a credit line and the importance of maintaining a solid credit score.
Each step you take, increase both the amount of the allowance and the number of expenses your child is responsible for. Hopefully, after all of this, your child will be comfortable with the idea of financial independence and will understand how to handle it properly. If you can manage that, you’ll surely have done your job as a parent, and your son or daughter will be way ahead of the game!
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Tags: Financial Education, money management, personal finance, personal finance for children
That’s how you hog “column inches”. Old sportswriters’ trick for old sportswriters.
Courtney,
I don’t get it… sorry…