The Gold Coast Bulletin

Kids must work to get paid

- SOPHIE ELSWORTH

MOST Australian children are handed pocket money without having to do a scrap of work, new research has shown.

About 56 per cent don’t lift a finger yet they are still handed money, an exclusive News Corp survey of more than 1200 parents has found.

And about 30 per cent of children are under the illusion money comes from somewhere other than hard work – including parents, the bank or even the supermarke­t.

But the Barefoot Investor, Scott Pape, believes the secret to success when teaching kids about money is making sure they handle physical cash.

The rise in “tap and go” at the checkout has made it tougher for kids to understand; his method of using jam jars to save their money, then later graduating to accounts, makes it real.

“It’s more important now with money becoming invisible so for me using jam jars makes sense,” Pape said.

“They want to see the money and have a direct link between work and the money piling up.”

Pape today releases his next book, The Barefoot Investor for Families: The Only Kids Money Guide You’ll Ever Need – and is hoping it will arm parents and grandparen­ts with the necessary skills to make kids money smart.

He said his simplistic three jam jar policy – including a spend, smile and give jar – will help put Aussies kids in good financial stead.

“A lot of parents are sporadic with their pocket money, in my view kids need to do jobs and if they don’t do the jobs they don’t get paid,” Pape said.

“It’s really easy to do, it doesn’t matter how much you pay them, for some families it could be a dollar per age per week, so $6 per week for a sixyear-old.”

The survey also showed 82 per cent of parents believe kids should be taught about money at school and in the home, but about half are not happy with the financial education kids get at school.

Mother-of-two Georgie Gonczi said her two sons, Monty, 7 and Louis, 4, must do jobs around the home to earn cash.

“We only give them pocket money when they do jobs and the most they can get is $5 for washing the car inside and out,” she said.

The rise in use of credit cards has also left Australian­s owing more than $51.6 billion on plastic and more than $32.6 billion is accruing interest.

Yet despite seeing their parents use them, many children don’t understand how cards work.

The survey found about 40 per cent of children believe their parent’s credit card is their own money, while 60 per cent believe it is the bank’s money.

And about 76 per cent of parents wish they were taught more about money when they were younger.

The Barefoot Investor For Families, by Scott Pape, is published by HarperColl­ins Australia and in bookstores from today. credit

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