Molly-Mae Hague shares a snap of lost cat Eggy 'hiding in plain sight' but can YOU spot him? Vicky McClure looks tense as she reprises her role as a bomb disposal expert to film dramatic scenes for Trigger Point season two Simon Cowell continues to wear a surgical corset as he arrives at America's Got Talent filmingįinally, spring has sprung! Make the most of it with one of these tempting last-minute getaways Priyanka Chopra cradles her baby daughter Malti in a striking pink co-ord as she touches down at Mumbai Airport with husband Nick Jonas Lionel Richie tells Drew Barrymore her wild child days in 'wolf pack' with his daughter Nicole 'almost killed me' 'Kids have such a small perspective of the world that they won't always remember each monthly pay the next month.' 'The most important thing is that you pay them weekly,' she said. If they need to buy a present for a birthday party, for example, their pocket money won't necessarily cover it. She said, however, that you can't expect a child to pay for everything when you're giving them that little money. By the time they're 15, $25 is more than ample and they should be saving.' 'A good tip is to give them $7 when they're seven, up it to $8 when they're eight. 'I reckon pocket money should start around age seven, or when they get their second teeth,' Ms Haycraft told Daily Mail Australia. Sydney's children's education expert and former school counsellor Pauline Haycraft previously revealed when you should pay your kids, how often and how much. 'Employed teens aged 14-18 are more financially prepared for the future, and according to their parents, transact with digital money more frequently, are three times more likely to show an interest in tax and five times more likely to show an interest in superannuation than their unemployed peers,' the report found.
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