The National - News

Let kids be kids, but help them prepare for the trials of the financial jungle

- DECLAN McVEIGH Declan McVeigh is a staff opinion writer at The National

Ihave to admit it – when I saw a recent news headline in this newspaper that read Six strategies to get children excited about investing, I felt my heart sink a little. Many parents ruefully acknowledg­e that their children grow up quick but in these hyperconne­cted times it seems that the window for childlike innocence shrinks with each digital leap forward.

A vision of youngsters glued to their devices as they play with stocks and bonds, build up an investment portfolio or wrestle with the tedium of concepts like inflation or dividends struck me as profoundly dispiritin­g. Is there nothing our market economy cannot reach?

Neverthele­ss, it got me thinking about my own financial education, which was as far removed from playing the stock market as one can imagine. “Put 10 per cent of your money in a savings account” was about the height of it. So, when I contrast this with the financial nous required for getting by in an increasing­ly complex and uncertain world, the idea of teaching children the fundamenta­ls of investing suddenly seemed less like a drab imposition than an important form of empowermen­t.

This is not to disparage the valuable, time-worn financial habits that were instilled in me as I grew up. Saving, setting something aside for a rainy day, understand­ing the difference between using credit and racking up debt – all of this was and is sage advice. But the world has moved on, and there is now a chasm between the wisdom that held true in the 1980s and the kind of knowledge young people will need for the 21st century.

We live in times where even seemingly safe choices look less certain than before. High inflation and a cost-of-living crisis across several countries have eroded the value of many people’s cash savings, particular­ly those held in accounts whose modest rate of return cannot keep pace with rising prices. Keeping a few thousand aside may be a sensible short-term move, but the damage inflation wreaks on the value of those sums over the years means today’s children must be taught a shrewder approach. Even property, once the great repository for personal wealth, seems less secure – something that many insurance companies faced with increasing climate-damage pay-outs could attest to.

I came to investing relatively late in life. As someone inherently averse to taking financial risks, playing around in the stock market seemed like the last thing I should be doing. However, a two-day introducto­ry course in passive investing in Dubai a few years ago changed all of that. Once the mystery had been stripped from identifyin­g reliable index funds and long-term government bonds to anchor a modest but growing portfolio, I was left wondering – why wasn’t I taught this before?

Admittedly, when I was growing up, the technology, companies and markets required for such an approach simply weren’t there. Now, however, stocks, bonds and cryptocurr­ency can be bought and sold on your phone with a simple swipe of the screen. Some regard this as the democratis­ation of trading which cuts out the expensive middleman; more sceptical observers describe it as gamificati­on, which can have serious financial implicatio­ns – this is real money being traded, not tokens in a game. The fact is this: investing is as accessible as never before and, in the same way that tech-savvy children are taught by schools and parents to use the internet effectivel­y but safely, the same approach should apply to online investing.

As in so many other areas of life, a child’s background plays an important part in their exposure to sound financial ideas. Research from the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t, which defines financial literacy as “a core life skill for participat­ing in modern society”, has found that “families with high socio-economic status are providing students better opportunit­ies to acquire financial literacy skills than socio-economical­ly disadvanta­ged families”. If education

Teaching children how to invest online seems less like a drab imposition than a vital form of empowermen­t

is rightly regarded as a pathway for working-class children to get on and succeed in life, then providing them with the right knowledge for 21st-century finance should be a no-brainer.

There is a right way and wrong way of doing this. Emphasisin­g the returns and rewards of investing over the real dangers that exist in playing the market should be paramount. A solid grasp of the ground rules is essential: no get-rich-quick scheme is worth the time and money; don’t forget about paying your taxes; read and understand the small print; and – most importantl­y – if something is too good to be true, it probably isn’t.

There’s more to life than money – but knowing how to wisely invest what you have can lead to independen­ce, options, mobility and security. It can also go a long way towards making your life and the lives of your loved ones better. Money – having it, keeping it, growing it – is an inescapabl­e reality of life for almost everyone. Although I’m still not persuaded that children should be “excited” about investing, leaving them in the dark doesn’t do them any favours either.

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