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Even teens are feeling the pinch in this economy

Posted Oct 31 2008, 11:42 AM by Karen Datko
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Like blogger Neimanmarxist, we were amazed at a recent statistic in The New York Times: Annual discretionary spending by teens has fallen to $2,600, a recent survey shows. That's 27% below the all-time high of $3,560 reported in the spring of 2006.

"Really?" the 20-something blogger wrote in a post at The Reductionist. "Teenagers get that much money? I didn't."

We expected a snarky follow-up from her, but instead Neimanmarxist showed empathy for today's teens: With so much to spend, she said, no wonder marketers prey on them, creating peer pressure to have the latest stuff. No wonder too many teens define their self-worth with an expensive cell phone.

No wonder some feel panicky about the economy.

The NYT story was full of anecdotes about teens who've been used to buying whatever they want, and are freaking out because their struggling parents are cutting back. 

Some were even more stunned when their parents explained why. One Ohio mother interviewed in the story showed her teens the family bills. "When her son saw the mortgage bill he thought it was an annual payment," the story said.

The NYT piece and other excellent articles suggest how to talk to teens about the current economy. Explain the family's situation in a calm way that doesn't cause panic. Enlist the kids' help with yard work and other things that used to be outsourced. Teach the kids how to make better budgeting and spending decisions.

It's not impossible. The survey mentioned in the NYT showed that while teen spending on clothes increased by 1%, they're shopping at lower-end stores. That's a start. (In all fairness, we must add that the annual spending figures for teens include money from jobs, as well as allowance and gifts.)

Neimanmarxist has another suggestion. She wasn't immune to peer pressure when she was a teenager, and she wishes her parents had handled it differently, rather than simply telling her she couldn't spend. She thinks you can teach your children that frugality is cool. She wrote:

I think one thing that was decidedly absent from my childhood ... were ongoing conversations about the things we valued about ourselves (for example, being an intellectual, frugal family) and discussions of why certain things that most people value -- i.e., phones and cars -- were of no use for us.

Comments

 

Kids today are spoiled rotten. I am an adult and after paying for basic living expenses and saving for retirement I dont spend much more then that. But than again I could care less what type of cell phone I have or what logo is on my clothes.

Don't get me started.  Every parent I know is teching ZEERO values to their children adn generally in debt themselves and God forbid little princess or princess isn't coddled.  I can't get over the number of mothers I see who refuse to "discipline" their children for fear they will grow up "scarred."  And I am talking simple , necessary discipline. They are raising entitled little egomaniacs who can't commit to anything in life let alone earn a living.  Most 30 year old men are living like their 18 and still at home - statistics prove it. SAD state of affairs. It's the Raunch Culture - just look at today's videos of choice  "Girls Gone Wild" - bet those girls will never get a good job, marry or raise healthy kids. The luxury goods market is jsut that - for people with class and wealth - not teh generall masses - I am sorry but  when it goes global, I don't want to carry it anymore...........it's lost all fo it's cache to me -

my husband serves as a financial advisor to some of the wealthiest people in our affluent shore of chicago.  these people WORK.  they own companies, or huge shares of companies to which they've congtributed greatly.  kids today think they don't have to work hard- they know that socialists like obama will redistribute wealth that pioneers before them have earned.

I didn't have an allowance growing up at all.  My mother said that she shouldn't have to pay me to do something because she provides a roof over my head.  Whatever, that's fine.  She also worked me like a dog so I should have gotten paid.  Anyways--along with never giving me an allowance she also never offered any advice on how to manage money.  Our family was comfortable, upper middle class and money was never an issue--so when I got married (I went from my parent's house to marriage), that's how I thought of it and we didn't make half of what my dad did.  I have been married for 4 years now and I am just learning the difference between needs and wants and how to budget.  

I feel sorry for the kids who really are handed everything (and without being subjected to the 'chores' I had to do), I speak from experience.  Their parents really are just setting them up for failure.  I hope they are prepared to take care of their children for the rest of the child's life because that is what's going to happen.

Ah childhood...wasted on the young.  My children had more discretionary money to spend each month than I did.  This is because they don't pay taxes, rent, food, gas, etc. with their money.  However...I was OK with that because I know once a young person leaves home, he/she will learn about the true cost of living.  I am happy that my kids had money to spend on themselves at one time during their life.  Now, they are all spending their hard earned cash on their children.

I really do feel sorry for the kids, even though it isn't there fault it is the parents.  People really do need a wake up call.  HELLO everything in life isn't free.  The difference between now and back then (30-40 years ago) is they worked for what they wanted.  Now everyone just wants to put there 40 hours in a week a go home and do nothing.  I have watched some workers out there on the side of the road leaning on there shovels I always use my shovels for moving dirt not as a cane.  But not only do they want to work less and get paid more, they don't want to work at all and want affordable health care.  What a joke.  I work 60-70 hours a week and go to school full time.  Should I be taxed more because someone is lazy and wants healthcare.

The children today have more things then I ever dreamed of having as a child.

I worked and saved my money and bought the things I wanted when I had saved enough to buy them. I did not count on my parents to buy the things for me, as I knew about there expenses as I could see the bills as I watched when they paid them and what the amounts where on the screens at the gas pumps and the grocery stores.

I believe most kids are spoiled today, as I have seen them ask for something every time we go out shopping. I will say' what about your Playstation, and your Guitar Rock'? They will say "I'm tired of that and want something new; that's old now".

I tell them, then you can do little jobs and I'll pay you and then you can save 'your money' and buy what you want like I did.

I'm 15 years-old, and I don't think EVERY kid is like that. Of course, there are some extremes (like the stereotyped I-love-shopping girl). It's not because we get some money that we can't learn what to do with it. I do get an allowance, but I put all of it in a savings account, ever since I was 7 years-old. My parents never forced me to do this, and my brother (who had the same education that I did) always spends his on the latest video games. Bottom line, quit putting everyone in the same jar. We take all our attention on the bad cases, and forget abour the good ones.

I forgot to say. Yes, my parents pay for my clothes, but since I only go shopping once a year (I currently own 1 jean, 1 pant and 5 T-Shirts) in non-fashion shops, I don't think it's much of a concern. I don't have a cellphone, nor do I want one. I don't have the latest Ipod, the latest shoes (who cares about shoes?), make-up, jewelry, whatever you can think of, but I don't feel deprived by it. I know I don't need that, and I'm not caught on the ''spending treadmill''. The only thing I force my parents to buy are fruits and veggies- lots of it!!!

In agreement with Isa ^.^ Not all teenagers are lazy and spoiled-rotten. That's a stereotype. Yes, times are clearly a lot different now, I will not argue with that but some of us actually have a brain and save up for college and what not.

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