Experts warn telling kids ‘we can’t afford it’ may fuel lifelong money stress. A wording change helps

Experts warn telling kids ‘we can’t afford it’ may fuel lifelong money stress. A wording change helps


How often have you heard — or said — the phrase, “Sorry, we can’t afford it” when kids ask for a treat?

Whether it’s a candy bar at the grocery store or a big-ticket request like a Disney vacation, many parents rely on those four words to quickly shut down a money conversation.

It feels harmless. Even practical. After all, kids don’t need a breakdown of the household budget every time they ask for something. But financial psychologists are now saying this phrase can do more damage than parents realize.

Here’s why parents are cautioned to delete this phrase from their vocabulary, and what you can say instead to help your children understand financial literacy, and raise kids who feel empowered about money.

Kids form their core beliefs about money before age seven, say researchers from the University of Cambridge. (1)

Repeatedly telling children “we can’t afford it” can frame money as scarce, stressful, and out of their control — an attitude that may follow them well into adulthood.

Over time, this language can contribute to financial anxiety, shame around spending, and unhealthy money behaviors later in life.

“Instead of cutting off the conversation with an abrupt, ‘We can’t afford it,’ try saying, ‘We could do that, but we’re choosing to spend our money on these things instead, and here’s why,’” says Brad T. Klontz, a financial psychologist and certified financial planner, in an interview with CNBC. (2)

Since kids begin forming their core beliefs about money long before they understand paychecks, utility bills, or mortgage rates, a child who grows up associating money with restriction and stress may swing in the opposite direction as an adult.

This can result in overspending once they finally have access to credit cards, loans, or disposable income. The emotional response becomes, “Now I can finally have what I never did as a child,” rather than making thoughtful, values-based financial decisions.

That mindset can fuel what experts call financial anxiety: a persistent sense of worry, guilt, or fear around money, even when someone is financially stable. Financial anxiety can show up as avoidance (not checking bank accounts), impulsive spending, chronic stress, or difficulty planning for the future. (3)


finance.yahoo.com
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