The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Give your millennial this all-in-one financial guide

- Michelle Singletary Readers can write to Michelle Singletary c/o The Washington Post, 1301 K St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071. Her email address is michelle. singletary@washpost.com.

Perhaps you’re a good money manager and you taught your children well.

Or maybe you struggle royally with your finances and haven’t passed on good habits.

Either way, we parents of young adults tend to think that when our children turn 18 our job is nearly done. They hit 21 and we’re like, “It’s party time.”

After that point, you might think that if they make a money mistake, it’s on them, right? Wrong. They will enter a complicate­d world and face financial challenges that are harder to solve than a Rubik’s Cube.

There are just so many ways to get this money thing wrong. So be prepared to stay on parenting duty. You’ll still be needed.

With this in mind — and with graduating season upon us — many parents, grandparen­ts, aunts and uncles often ask me for a recommenda­tion on a financial book for their newly minted young adult.

This year, I have a new suggestion, which will double as this month’s Color of Money Book Club pick. It’s “Get a Financial Life: Personal Finance in Your Twenties and Thirties” (Touchtone, $16.99) by Beth Kobliner.

The author is a financial journalist who first published this book 20 years ago. She has just released an updated version that is an all-in-one guide for millennial­s.

In 2016, there were an estimated 79.8 million people in the millennial cohort, according to the Pew Research Center. I wonder how many are truly prepared to tackle today’s financial issues.

If we go by the many surveys about this generation’s money habits, a lot aren’t ready.

Millennial­s want what most Americans want — a home, debt-free living and, eventually, a comfortabl­e retirement. Yet, when asked, only 49 percent said they have a plan to live out that dream, according to Bank of the West. The survey also found that, in practice, millennial­s prioritize saving for travel over putting away money for retirement or a home.

This makes sense. They aren’t being irresponsi­ble. They’re acting their age. They want new experience­s and, in their minds, they have plenty of time to save.

Kobliner knows her audience. She starts with a crib-note chapter for readers who may be intimidate­d by a whole book about financial stuff.

If you do give this as a graduation gift, tuck a card and some cash in the first chapter. In it, your millennial will find eight financial strategies that Kobliner says will put him or her on a solid path. They are:

■ Get health insurance. “It’ll help protect you if you have an accident or illness, and guarantee that you don’t bankrupt yourself,” she writes.

■ Pay off debt sooner rather than later. “You can usually ‘earn’ more by paying off a loan than you can by saving and investing.”

■ Ignore the feeling that you’re too young to start saving for retirement. “Saving money in a retirement plan is one of the smartest (and easiest) things you can do when you’re young.”

■ Maintain an emergency fund. “Have money automatica­lly withdrawn from each paycheck and funneled into an oldschool savings account.”

■ Invest in low-cost stock and bond index funds outside a workplace retirement plan. Don’t know what these are? Chapter 5 explains investing fundamenta­ls.

■ Manage your credit score. “Think of your credit score as the GPA of your financial abilities, a numerical representa­tion of how appealing you are to lenders. Unlike your GPA, however, your credit score is being recalculat­ed all the time.”

■ Don’t rush to buy a home. “The decision about whether to switch from renter to owner involves more than simply comparing your monthly rent to the mortgage payment.”

■ Pay attention to your taxes. There are things you can do during the year to optimize your tax situation.

Also encourage your child to read the chapter on taking financial stock of their life. As we know, many young adults are starting off with record amounts of student loan debt.

“The good news is that if you start paying attention to your finances today, you can set in motion habits that will pay off for the rest of your life,” Kobliner coaches.

This is the kind of book that needs an advocate. It’s got all the right informatio­n and tools, but without some encouragem­ent, it might just be set aside.

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