The mission of the Debt Guys is to help each person become Money Conscious resulting in eliminating their debt, living a debt free life and empowering them to achieve financial success by virtue of the universal principles discovered by us through our own financial mistakes, victories and professional training.
Showing posts with label financial education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial education. Show all posts
Friday, October 18, 2013
"Do you want to save 10% on your purchase today?" "No."
Did you ever regret agreeing to sign up for that retail credit card? Here are four steps to correct that.
Labels:
budgeting,
cash is king,
credit,
credit card,
debt,
debt free,
debt free principles,
financial education,
financial management,
living below your means,
personal finance
Location:
Denver, CO 80220, USA
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Preparing Your Child for the “Real World”
We’re
reading more and more about the escalating
costs of college and how unprepared young adults are to manage
their own money. We’re not judging. We were financial nightmares ourselves. In hindsight, we feel we weren’t given
sufficient tools to be prepared. Blame
that on upbringing or education or whatever.
Personal finance education isn’t
coming from school anytime soon. What’s
a parent to do? What if you treat your high school-aged child as a
roommate? Ha!? What?
Why would you do that?
Hear
us out. Studies show that when students
first get into college, they’re not financially mature. They don’t understand the value of a dollar. They don’t understand why they should be
cautious about, spending, school sponsored credit cards and debt. They aren’t prepared to pay bills or share
expenses with their roommates.
As
CNNMonday reports, the
average allowance paid by the 61% of parents who pay one is $15 a week. Most
kids don’t save this money. 81% of
parents say they’ve discussed money management with their kids. What does this really mean when allowances
are spent almost as soon as they’re received?
This suggests there aren’t enough
real-life examples for children, only theory. CNNMoney suggests using allowances as a
“gateway to budgeting”, reserving the money for going out with friends and
short-term expenses.
What
if parents took this further? The idea
is to provide a real-life example of the value
of a dollar. If, when students get
into high school, they are treated as a roommate, they’ll more quickly become financially mature. Maybe home shouldn’t be a free ride.
What
do we mean, exactly? Have teenagers pay bills. Maybe have them pay all or a portion of
their phone bill. Make them responsible for covering a portion of the groceries they
eat, maybe provide cabinet space for their own food. Make them pay for gas, car insurance or part
of the car payment. They could even pay “rent”
and if they miss a payment, they sleep on the couch.
This
may require a bigger allowance or them getting a part-time job. Of course, children can’t be responsible for
covering all of their expenses without a full-time job. Parents
are still responsible for providing most needs, so make sure they eat and
sleep well.
Parents
are also solely responsible, apparently, for providing their children with personal finance education. We think this may be a helpful way to do so.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
An Answer to the Higher Education Bubble . . . the Internet?
With the costs of college skyrocketing, students are beginning to look elsewhere.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Be a Financial Role Model
Another way to help your child(ren) learn about money is to be a good financial role model. Mostly this requires talking.
Monday, October 7, 2013
Teaching Children About Money
It's never too early to teach your children about money. Money management won't be taught in school This subject is completely up to you. Here are some age-appropriate tips.
Labels:
cash,
cash is king,
cash management,
college,
consumer,
credit cards,
debt,
education,
finance,
financial education,
investment,
investor,
money management,
parenting,
saving,
teaching
Location:
Denver, CO 80220, USA
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