Waikato Times

SquareOne teaches kids money moves

- Melanie Carroll

A New Zealand app to teach children about money is aimed at the recent generation­s of cashless parents.

SquareOne’s two co-founders had careers in financial services and were nudged into creating the app when their own children were at the age of discussing pocket money and bank accounts.

‘‘The only thing our kids have ever seen is mum and dad just tap a card, and you get what you want 24/7,’’ said Jovan Pavlicevic.

Without hard cash, for example coins for a piggy bank, it was difficult to teach money lessons, so Pavlicevic and Jamie Jerman came up with the idea of an app to foster good financial habits using a debit card instead.

‘‘For millennia there has been some sort of physical medium of exchange and suddenly that has gone in one generation.

‘‘How do we teach our kids the value of a dollar and where a dollar comes from, and how much effort it takes you to earn that?’’

Once the app is downloaded, and parents set the level of control they want, children are issued a Mastercard debit card bank account number.

Since launching in November, SquareOne has signed up 45,000 customers, beating the first-year target of 30,000 in fewer than seven months. The pair expect customer numbers for the year to hit 100,000.

The card has no details on it aside from the child’s first name and the Mastercard and SquareOne logos, reducing fraud risk.

It is not a credit card, so cannot go into debt, and cannot be used at R18 stores such as liquor outlets. Parents receive push notificati­ons for each transactio­n and can set parameters such as how much can be spent and if online spending is allowed.

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