The economy
here and abroad is terrifying. There are some serious issues that need
to be addressed and no band-aid is going to fix what ails us. I was
sent the following article by Tom Dyson, publisher of The Palm Beach Letter and
thought I would pass it along. Take what you want and leave the rest,
but hopefully, it will get you and your family thinking about the
financial lessons you are teaching your children. chrissie
I wrote this essay for your children and grandchildren.
You've
probably heard about America's huge debt load. The U.S. government's
financial obligations now exceed $663,000 per American family. This
burden will fall on the youngest Americans.
It's unethical. It's unfortunate. But it's the reality.
With
this giant financial obligation bearing down on them, it's critical
that now – right now – your children and grandchildren learn about
money and finance. They need to know the basic principles… like how to
be independent, why debt is dangerous, and how to grow money.
They don't teach finance in schools. If you don't teach them this knowledge, no one will. They call this financial illiteracy.
If our children are financially illiterate, they have as much chance of survival as a swordsman in a gunfight. There will be no mercy for the financially illiterate in the future. It's likely these people will live as indentured servants to the government and its creditors.
But
if our kids have a grasp of finance and its basics – and they obey its
laws – they will grow up rich. They will be in a position to help
other Americans, too.
Below, you'll find the three vital
financial concepts all children need to understand. Please pass them on
to your children and grandchildren as soon as you can. I have two
young children… And these three concepts are my starting point for
their financial education.
First of all, our kids must know that
they are not entitled to money or wealth… or anything for that matter,
even Christmas presents. They must earn money. I want my children to
learn that they shouldn't expect anything to be handed to them. I don't
want them to rely on the government for their livelihood, like many
people do right now.
So many people treat money and prosperity
as an entitlement. The government even calls its welfare programs
"entitlements." This word – and what it represents – gets stamped into
young people's brains. Kids act as if they are somehow entitled to
toys, video games, and cars. But why should they be? Just because they
have parents, it doesn't mean they should get everything they want… or
anything at all, for that matter.
I plan to regularly remind my
children of this when they are old enough to understand it. And I'm not
going to pay my kids an allowance. An allowance would reinforce the
sense of entitlement. They can make money by earning it: doing the
dishes, making their beds, mowing the lawn… there are a million things.
My wife and I will pay them for doing those things. But I'm not going
to just give them money.
The second concept our children need to
understand is debt. Debt is expensive. If you abuse it, it will
destroy you. Like the entitlement mentality, debt is an enslaver. It
robs you of your independence. I avoid debt in my personal life… and
when I'm choosing investments.
The best way to illustrate the
cost of debt is to calculate the total amount of interest the debt
generates in dollars over the lifetime of the loan, instead of looking
at the interest rate (like most people do). Once you look at it like
that, you can see how expensive borrowing money really is.
For
example, say you borrow $100,000 with a 30-year mortgage at 7%. Over 30
years, you'll end up paying $140,000 in interest to the bank. In the
end, you're out $240,000 for a house that cost less than half that. Not
a good deal.
The third thing our kids need to learn is the power of compound interest and the best way to harness it.
Compound
interest is the most powerful force in finance. It is the force behind
almost every fortune. The brilliant Richard Russell calls compound
interest "The Royal Road to Riches." And it's mathematically
guaranteed.
Let's say, for example, you have $100 earning 10%
annual interest. At the end of a year, you'll have $110. During the
second year, you'll earn interest on $110 instead of $100. In the third
year, you'll earn interest on $121… and so on. This is the power of
compound interest. The numbers get enormous over time, simply because
you're earning interest on your interest.
Because time is the most important element in compounding, it's an incredibly powerful idea for children to understand. They have the ultimate edge in the market: the time to compound over decades.
The
stock market is the best place to earn compound interest. You buy
companies that have 50 years or more of rising dividend payments ahead
of them. Then you let the mathematics work.
As soon as my kids
are old enough to understand some arithmetic, I am going to sit down
with the classic compounding tables and show them which stocks they
have to buy. I'll use Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, and Phillip
Morris as examples.
After that, assuming they have the discipline to follow through, they will get rich. There's no doubt about it.
In
sum, you have the responsibility to educate your kin about finance. If
you don't, no one else will, and they will suffer for it.
Encourage
them to work hard and avoid the entitlement mentality. Teach them the
power of compound interest and explain the dangers of debt.
If
you do this, you will equip your kids and grandkids to survive
financially in the difficult circumstances ahead. You'll provide them
with something that nobody can place a price on: the power of
independence.
Good investing.
No comments:
Post a Comment