Ski_Banker
Suspended
I see your point, but I don't think a 5 yr old needs society to teach him to not touch a hot stove. He needs a parent and/or 1 bad experience. A lot of people are getting their bad experiences now. The school of hard knocks is still a school and those lessons are likely to stick.
And what kid doesn't form some basic thoughts on value and worth when trading baseball cards, hot wheels, etc?
I had no official financial education and managed to live within my means, save, handle a mortgage, and swing an NSX to boot. A lot of that comes from Yankee frugality and growing up close to poor. People can educate themselves by reading (books or online) if they choose to do so and take it upon themselves.
So this is what I wrote -- you were the only person that really commented on it, but I think the point needs further debate.
It's not your fault when society does nothing to teach people how to play the game. How to manage money. How to make smart economic decisions.
Frankly (and this is one reason I'm a Junior Achievement volunteer), I think that the public schools in America FAIL in a colossal sense. They FAIL because they teach kids what to know (to go to college, to be productive citizens) but they don't even remotely address how kids should spend their incomes. It's very much like preparing youngsters to be a bunch of rock stars... people that can potentially make loads of $$ but have zero clue how to manage it.
So what role does Western society have in educating kids? 99% of the population believes the public education is critical (and needs improving). Even rich folks don't argue with the necessity of public education.
My point:
You can *waste* 13+ years of a kids life on public education, teaching both important and unimportant subjects to be a contributing member of society. But you don't teach anything that relates to the U.S.'s economic backbone: capitalism. You can teach arithmetic (and calculus) to kids, but, fundamentally, the most important math problems they will ever face will be personal finance related. Most smart high school kids can balance chemical equations (I've long since forgotten how), but don't have a damn clue about interest rates. It just makes no sense.
And, just like almost anything else, this subject can also be taught by parents. Assuming parents know anything either (and, clearly, most don't)
So, in my very strong opinion, this is an *easy* subject to teach in schools...but just hasn't been. One hour, one semester, every few years solves the problem.