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Teaching your children how to handle their 'aguinaldo' (also applies to your Christmas bonus!) | Philstar.com
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Health And Family

Teaching your children how to handle their 'aguinaldo' (also applies to your Christmas bonus!)

RAISING CHILDREN WITH HIGH FQ - Rose Fres Fausto - Philstar.com
Teaching your children how to handle their 'aguinaldo' (also applies to your Christmas bonus!)

Cash has become the popular aguinaldo because of its practicality.

It’s Christmas time again! A lot of us are getting stressed once more completing our long gift list that rivals that of Santa Claus. In that list, what’s usually challenging is what to give your inaanaks or godchildren. Unless they are very close to you, chances are, you don’t even know what their interests are, how old they are now, what grade/year they’re in now.

“Aguinaldo” comes from the Spanish word that means gift. In the Philippine context, we associate this with children visiting their godparents and other older relatives to greet them Merry Christmas together with the Pinoy gesture of “Mano po!” In return the godparents and other older relatives are expected to hand to the children their aguinaldo, usually in the form or cash.

Cash has become the popular aguinaldo because of its practicality - no need to figure out what the kid wants, no need to wrap and it’s relevant to kids of all ages! Because of this, you have to order your crisp bills from your bank early on as they easily run out during the season.

Now here’s the challenge. During Christmas, chances are, your children will also receive cash gifts from their godparents and other relatives? Who should handle the money? Should you? Or your child? How should the money be spent? Should you just let your child use it the way he wants to? It’s his money anyway?

Here are some of the things that I remember teaching my three sons about their aguinaldo.

1. Right from the start, we have separated our children’s money from ours (their parents). We opened their own bank accounts as soon as they were born, and that’s where we deposited the cash gifts they received from their baptism, birthdays, Christmas, etc.

2. When they were old enough to receive the cash gifts themselves, it somehow became the most natural thing for them to do as well. They would deposit the cash gifts.

3. As they got older and became more interested in buying stuff, they would still ask us, “Is it okay to spend a bit of my aguinaldo to buy this thing?” But they would still set aside a significant percentage that goes to their savings and investments.

4. When I asked them why, they said because that’s what they’ve gotten used to already, plus they’re also aware that setting aside something helps increase their net asset value reflected in their Balance Sheet.

5. A lot of times our Christmas gifts to them is also cash. This is what they use as their shopping budget when we have our yearender, usually in a place we have not been to as a family. The most frugal of the three usually ends up not spending everything.

Train your children to handle their aguinaldo right from the start.

Aguinaldo and mental accounting:

There’s a Behavioral Economics principle that’s happening in the way people spend their aguinaldo or for employees, their Christmas bonus. Cashflow that comes in once in a blue moon (or not regularly) is considered a windfall and they somehow tend to spend it more freely, less prudently.

We tend to use categories in the way we treat money. We spend windfall or unexpected income less carefully than we do our hard earned or regular income. We usually act as if that money was not supposed to be with us anyway so it easily finds its way out – i.e. we spend it.

This is called Mental Accounting or the House Money Effect. This was first described by the Father of Behavioral Economics and 2017 Nobel laureate Richard Thaler, and Eric Johnson in a paper written in 1990 “Gambling with the House Money and Trying to Break-even.” In casinos, it is observed that when one wins while playing, the profits are made separate from the original capital. Then the gambler is more willing to bet all his profits because he feels that the money is “house money.”

This is also observable in people investing in the stock market. They view their profits as disposable and take greater risks, which usually brings them back to zero profits, if not negative. Mental accounting makes us spend windfall income more freely.

In teaching your children (and yourself) how to handle aguinaldo and Christmas bonus, be aware of this principle, and remember: The money that you earn on a regular basis, or what you may consider as your hard earned money, has the same monetary value as the ones you receive once in a blue moon. It’s great to enjoy this unexpected income by treating yourself, but it’s also great to use it as an opportunity to accelerate your saving and investing. So it’s a matter of dividing what goes to “happiness today” and “happiness tomorrow!” (Of course, don’t forget to discuss the true meaning of Christmas with your children, but that belongs to another article.

The next time you receive your aguinaldo or bonus, just divide it into 1) what goes to happiness today that you can freely spend and 2) what goes to happiness tomorrow (i.e. your old age) that you should invest for your retirement years.

Advanced Merry Christmas! Cheers to your high FQ in handling your aguinaldo and Christmas bonus! 

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

1. Our FQwentuhan – How to handle aguinaldo and Christmas bonus will come out at 12 noon on Thursday November 30, 2017 on FQ Mom’s Facebook page. 

2. Want to know your FQ score? Take it today. Click link to take the test. http://tinyurl.com/FQTest

Rose Fres Fausto is a speaker and author of bestselling books "Raising Pinoy Boys" and "The Retelling of The Richest Man in Babylon" (English and Filipino versions). Click this link to read samples – Books of FQ Mom Rose. She is a behavioral economist, a certified gallup strengths coach and the grand prize winner of the first Sinag Financial Literacy Digital Journalism Awards. Follow her on Facebook and You Tube as FQ Mom, and Twitter & Instagram as theFQMom.

ATTRIBUTIONS: Images from Philippine Climate Adaptation, Charle’s E-Page, Clipartpanda.com, Mycutegraphics.com, Pinterest, Behance.net, Flickr were used to help deliver the message of the article. 

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