



Intention vs reality: What happens when children take over their parents' finances
The tables have turned. Those from the generation that grew up hearing “money doesn't grow on trees” are now sitting their parents down with Excel sheets, explaining how and why money actually grows in the stock market if you let it compound.While their parents prioritize safety, Millennial and Gen Z India's aim for optimization.
They view their parents' finances not as a pot of savings but as an inefficient portfolio that needs fixing. This dynamic creates a fascinating, often painful, psychological clash.Here's a deep dive into why children push for this, the hidden psychology behind it, whether it’s actually helpful, and how to do it the right away.It isn’t just about making more money.
The desire to control parental finances often stems from the child’s own anxieties about the future.The child is usually mathematically right but emotionally wrong. But is their intervention good for their parents' finances?Don't try to turn your 60-year-old father into a 30-year-old venture capitalist.Ajay Pruthi is the founder of PLNR Investment Advisors and a Sebi-registered investment advisor.Catch all the Instant Personal Loan, Business Loan, Business News, Money news, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint.
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