From
Gratitude to Entitlement
Tweens, money and habits.
by Nathan Dungan
PARENTGUIDE
News March 2004
“If someone gave you $100 with no strings
attached, how would you use it?” As
soon as I posed this question to a fourth
grade class in suburban Philadelphia, the
surge of energy was palpable as their minds
spun with the overwhelming number of possible
answers. My objective— to see how their
financial habits (i.e. how they share, save
and spend money) were taking shape.
Consider the following:
1. There are nearly 80 million young people
under age 25 in the U.S.— almost one-third
of our population.
2. They spend and influence the spending of
more than $1 trillion a year in our $10 trillion
economy.
3. Young people spend five times more money
than their parents did at the same age—
adjusted for inflation.
4. The average 21-year-old has been the recipient
of more than 23 million ad impressions (i.e.
spend messages) during their lifetime—
that’s roughly 3,000 a day.
Young people are being “taught”
to spend and influence household spending
before they can form complete sentences. With
a lifetime of purchases in front of them,
the competition is fierce for shaping the
financial habits of America’s young
people. In fact, many consumer product companies
frequently work with ad agencies and child
psychologists to formulate strategies that
exploit children’s emotional vulnerabilities
all in the name of triggering a spending behavior.
A generation ago, the Federal Trade Commission
considered restricting advertising aimed at
children, but in 1980, Congress passed a law
preventing such action. Since then, the amount
of money spent by advertisers to reach children
has increased by a factor of 20— from
$100 million to over $2 billion a year. Children
have become the hottest targets of today’s
marketing dollars.
Our society is working overtime to addict
young people to spending and the social and
economic fall-out could be staggering. For
an indication of what lies ahead, consider
the financial habits of young adults in this
mammoth demographic group:
• The average college student has three
credit cards and $2,500 of credit card debt.
• 20 percent of college students have
$3,000 to $7,000 of credit card debt—
an increase of 60 percent in the last three
years.
• Young people under 25 are the fastest
growing age group filing for bankruptcy in
America.
• Bi-annual research of high school
seniors shows the overwhelming majority are
financially illiterate.
Note that I have not yet mentioned the other
two critical financial habits— sharing
and saving— that are essential life
skills for young people and for our society.
That is because unless a young person has
the good fortune of being taught those values
in the home, those habits will likely suffer
from extreme malnutrition.
We can do more. Young people need the village—
families, nonprofits, educational institutions,
the government and businesses— to stand
up and take notice that everybody wins when
they have a balanced diet of healthy financial
habits. I call it the Share-Save-Spend system.
Curiously, the approach is not new. My grandmother
who just celebrated her 94th birthday has
been living the philosophy her entire life—
Share, Save and then Spend. For her and others
I have met, the success comes in the prioritization
and in the routine. It’s not a philosophy
they use when it is convenient, rather it
is a lifestyle that defines the role money
and things play in their life.
And for families today that have adopted the,
dare I say, countercultural approach, the
success has been significant. Young people
who couldn’t keep two quarters in their
pocket and repeatedly fell prey to the entitlement
mantra are now managing their money and sharing
their resources with great success and satisfaction.
Nathan Dungan is an author, award-winning
speaker and national expert on family finances.
His book Prodigal Sons & Material Girls:
How Not to Be Your Child’s ATM (John
Wiley) was released in June of 2003. A top
performing financial advisor and vice president
of marketing for a Fortune 500 financial services
company, he founded Share-Save-Spend LLC,
an organization that helps people of all ages
develop and maintain healthy financial habits.
Dungan has been widely quoted in the New York
Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today
and TIME, and has appeared on CBS, CNN and
PBS. For more information on his book, to
sign-up for monthly Share-Save-Spend tips
or to contact him, visit www.sharesavespend.com.