
8 Financial Mistakes You Can Help Your Children Avoid
6/4/2015 5:07:31 PM

As parents, you can help your children avoid some common financial derailers—not just in college, but for life.
The principles of wise financial management aren’t that tough to master. You simply need to know the basics and abide by the disciplines and key principles. It also pays to avoid these eight most common financial mistakes:
- failure to set goals and plan/save for major purchases
- failure to set aside an emergency fund for unforeseen expenses
- spending more than you earn and failing to budget and monitor expenses
- incurring too much debt, including student loans and excessive credit card usage
- incurring significant fixed expenses relative to your income that can’t be reduced in difficult economic times (e.g., spending too much on housing and cars)
- impulse buying and lack of value consciousness when shopping
- failure to begin saving and investing for the future at the beginning of your career
- lack of discipline and understanding of basic financial concepts
This list isn’t just for young people—everyone needs to keep these principles in mind both now and in the future. Periodically review how you’re doing in each of these areas, and encourage your young adult children to do the same. (Remember, they’re watching you, so be sure to “walk the talk!”) If we can successfully avoid these traps, we’ll ALL be in better financial shape!
photo: freedigitalphotos.net, worradmu
Tagged as: finances, parenting, teens, financial literacy

I'm recommending a book for all the 20-30 year olds I meet to learn financial literacy: "Millionaire Teacher" by Andrew Hallam, even better than "Rich Dad, Poor Dad!"