Sarah Ford | April 2, 2015

Junior Achievement / Allstate Survey Reveals Disconnect Between Teens’ and Parents’ Views on Paying for College and Other Personal Finance Topics

NEW YORK, NY Junior Achievement USA(JA) and The Allstate Foundation released startling findings from the 2015 Teens & Personal Finance Survey, which expanded to include parents in the personal finance discussion for the first time in its 16-year history.

The 2015 survey reveals that nearly half of teens (48 percent) think their parents will help pay for college but only 16 percent of parents (of teens) report planning to pay for post-secondary education. Junior Achievement USA has commissioned the Teens & Personal Finance Survey for the last 16 years, partnering with The Allstate Foundation since 2005. was conducted online on Junior Achievement鈥檚 behalf by Harris Poll in January 2015 among 801 parents of teens ages 13-18 years old and 800 teens ages 13-18 years old.听

鈥淏ased on this year鈥檚 findings, it is obvious that parents and teens need to have honest conversations about money management, including paying for college,鈥 said Joseph Peri, president of JA New York. 鈥淭ogether as a family, it is important to develop a plan for life after high school 鈥 whatever that looks like for your family. As an organization that strives to empower all young people to own their economic success, JA will continue to help open these channels.鈥

The survey also reinforces that parents serve as teens鈥 biggest teachers when it comes to money management skills. Eighty-four percent of teens report looking to their parents for information on how to manage money, but more than a third (34 percent) of parents says their family鈥檚 approach to financial matters is not discuss money with their children and 鈥渓et kids be kids.鈥 Millennial parents, ages 18-34, are the least likely to be confident about explaining money management to their kids: 60 percent report feeling confident, while 76 percent of parents ages 35-44 and 79 percent of parents ages 45-54 report feeling the same.

When parents are talking to their kids about money, they are leaving girls out of the conversation more frequently. Teen girls are more likely than boys to say their parents don鈥檛 talk to them enough about money management (40 percent to 24 percent) and paying for college (34 percent to 23 percent). When asked about their future earning power at their first 鈥渞eal鈥 job, 24 percent of teen girls think they will make $15,000 or less, while only 16 percent of boys feel the same. Moms also are significantly more likely than dads to say their child will earn $15,000 or less (26 percent to 17 percent).听

Since 2005, Junior Achievement and The Allstate Foundation have partnered to provide students with valuable information about personal finance in the classroom and help them apply it in their lives. The JA Economics for Successprogram, created in partnership with The Allstate Foundation, has helped more than 1.2 million students set personal goals about money and make wise financial choices. The program also helps empower students to develop, plan and set goals to help protect them from unexpected financial pitfalls.听

Other key findings from the survey include:

  • Interest in community college is on the rise. When asked to consider the rising cost of college, a larger number of teens in 2015 are considering attending a local community college instead of another college or university: 22 percent in 2014 rose to 29 percent in 2015.
  • The gender gap continues in personal finance lessons from parents. Teen boys are more likely than teen girls to report that their parents help them keep track of money (31 percent to 20 percent). Teen boys also are more likely than teen girls to report they learned to take care of money from parents (88 percent to 80 percent).
  • The number of teens who think their parents don鈥檛 spend enough time talking to them about managing money significantly rose (21 percent in 2014 to 32 percent in 2015).

Methodology

This survey was conducted online within the United States by Harris Poll on behalf of Junior Achievement between January 12-30, 2015, among 801 U.S. adults aged 18 or older, who are the parents of teens aged 13-18 and 800 teens aged 13-18. Each group had an oversample of 200 Hispanics. The 2014 study was conducted online within the United States by Harris Poll and included 712 teens aged 13-18. Figures for age, race/ethnicity, education, region, and household income were weighted for parents where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population. For teens, figures for age, gender, race, parent鈥檚 education, region, and school location were weighted. Propensity score weighting was also used to adjust for respondents鈥 propensity to be online.

For More Information, Contact:

Jacqueline Dolly

Junior Achievement of New York听听

(212) 907-0046 听

jdolly@jany.org听 听听

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Kyle Donash

The Allstate Foundation

(847) 402-5600

kyle.donash@allstate.com


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