publication date: Nov 23, 2009
Research carried out by the
London School of Economics and O2 reveals that the
average child in Britain will
spend over £6000 between that ages of
seven and 15. While the amount of
pocket money is £6.84, children add to this through
gifts, part-time work or money
earned from doing extra chores around the house to improve their
spending power.
Children need to be
educated to spend their money wisely, so
Dr Rajiv Prabhakar has compiled a list of
seven top tips to keep your children on the
right financial track:
- Coin recognition – what coins and money and how to keep money safe.
- Saving money – knowing how to work out how long it will take to save up for something.
- Spending – making sure you understand the difference between "wants" and "needs".
- Basic budgeting – how to keep track of what you've spent and plan ahead.
- Interest rates – how interest rates make money grow if left for a long time, but how they can also make debt grow.
- Value of items – learning the difference between expensive and valuable and how something that costs a great deal, won't necessarily maintain its value.
- Bills – understanding how we pay for services (like mobile phones) and knowing the cost of a text and a call.