16-12-2012, 09:34 AM
It was my observation that even though personal finance is a much discussed topic in the news, schools and educators have yet to come up with a comprehensive compulsory system to educate school-kids and teenagers on how to properly manage their finances.
I was speaking to a friend over lunch and I remarked that personal finance is much more important than earning a lot of money, as it involves discipline and sacrifice. Most forumers will understand that earning a lot is useless if you are spending equally much, or even more, resulting in negative cash flow or zero savings. As d.o.g. had once pointed out many years ago - if you don't save, you can't invest.
My suggestion was for parents to start educating their own kids on personal finance, but my friend made a good point - most parents are either too reticent when it comes to personal finances (too shy to talk or "why should the kids know so much about our money") or else they themselves may be clueless about personal finance!
So the question comes back - how do we educate our youth on personal finance and make them financially literate and aware? The whole system is stacked against prudent investing and conservatism as banks require long loans with interest to earn money, and high interest credit card debt and car loans make up a good proportion of a bank's earnings. So they will be the last to educate young adults.
Any suggestions would be welcome!
I was speaking to a friend over lunch and I remarked that personal finance is much more important than earning a lot of money, as it involves discipline and sacrifice. Most forumers will understand that earning a lot is useless if you are spending equally much, or even more, resulting in negative cash flow or zero savings. As d.o.g. had once pointed out many years ago - if you don't save, you can't invest.
My suggestion was for parents to start educating their own kids on personal finance, but my friend made a good point - most parents are either too reticent when it comes to personal finances (too shy to talk or "why should the kids know so much about our money") or else they themselves may be clueless about personal finance!
So the question comes back - how do we educate our youth on personal finance and make them financially literate and aware? The whole system is stacked against prudent investing and conservatism as banks require long loans with interest to earn money, and high interest credit card debt and car loans make up a good proportion of a bank's earnings. So they will be the last to educate young adults.
Any suggestions would be welcome!
My Value Investing Blog: http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/