If you have children getting ready to head off to college, there’s one subject you shouldn’t leave to their professors to cover.
Money.
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants recommends that you have this all-important discussion before you and your dorm-bound kids walk out the door.
“Start with establishing a simple budget for their spending money,” advises Susan Bruno, CPA/PFS, of Beacon Wealth Consulting LLC, Rowayton, Conn, and member of the AICPA’s Personal Financial Specialist Credential Committee. “If you have felt like a bottomless pit piggy bank up until now, you will really feel like one when the panic call comes that their spending account is gone – and it’s only October.”
Bruno suggests these budget-setting tips:
“The more responsible children become, the greater life lesson they will learn,” said Bruno.
Additional tips to help parents discuss money management with their college-age children may be found at www.360financialliteracy.org [1], the website of 360 Degrees of Financial Literacy, a national effort of the CPA profession to help Americans understand how financial issues affect them at all ages. A related campaign, Feed the Pig (www.feedthepig.org [2]), educates 25 – 34 year-old Americans about preparing for long-term financial security.
Links:
[1] http://www.360financialliteracy.org
[2] http://www.feedthepig.org