Discover practical strategies for parents to raise financially savvy children in a digital world. Learn how to teach kids about money management, digital safety, and the importance of financial socialisation.
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Parents today face a very different challenge from those who raised children a generation ago. While many of us learnt about money at the corner shop, children are now growing up where money moves invisibly through apps and wallets. Raising ‘Money Smart Kids’ has become less about coins in a jar and more about preparing them for a digital, fast-changing financial life.
Why financial socialisation matters
Children learn in two main ways. The first is by watching. When your child sees you making school-related payments, comparing prices at the supermarket or via your shopping app, they are learning what “normal” looks like. The second is by talking. Open conversations about why you chose one product over another, or why you repay a loan, or have certain insurance, give children tools for adulthood.
Researchers call it financial socialisation, the process of learning values, attitudes, and behaviours that shape long-term financial wellbeing. The habits that children pick up between birth and age 17 are especially important. They set the foundation for how young people handle money as adults.
Growing up in a digital money world
Digital financial services have changed how families manage their money, and the shift is overwhelmingly positive. Today, almost everything can be tracked, paid for, or insured through a smartphone.
Importantly, you do not need to be a tech expert to raise financially savvy kids. The principles are the same: money has value, debt costs money, and planning reduces stress. What changes is how you model those lessons in a digital environment.
Practical tips for raising ‘money smart’ kids
Passing on confidence, not fear
The aim is not to raise experts, but young people who feel at ease with money. The best lessons are everyday ones: letting them see you budget or explain your choices.
You do not need every new app to teach this. What children remember is consistency, seeing careful choices, and honest money talk. In the end, it is less about the technology and more about the example you set.
* Seyuba is the head of people at digital financial services provider, Finchoice.
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