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© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

Monster-money-bank

 

The debate over whether or not to support our grown kids financially–all, in part or an occasional bit of help–falls into two camps: The Tough Lovers (not at all) and the Helping Handers (all of the above). Many of us who fall into the latter group like the way an occasional hand out feels. If we can afford it, it gives us pleasure to see our child use our gift–their legacy delivered early–to do something important or meaningful: buy a house, a safer car, top-quality day care for their child.

The key, of course, is not to overdo it and to feel comfortable that our child isn't demanding help–isn't asking for assistance out of a sense of entitlement.

I was reminded of the dangers of entitlement when I was reading one of my favorite columns in the NYTimes Sunday Business section: the Q and A with an industry or company leader. The interview almost always starts off with a question about the leader's youth–early leadership anecdotes or lessons learned from mom or dad. A recent one had a bit of kicker in the answer.

Carter Murray,the CEO of an international ad agency and a son who grew up in a comfortably well-to-do household in England, talked about how it felt to be at the receiving end of parental largesse. He lived in London as a child, went to college in the U.S., after which–well, I'll let him tell his story.

"After I graduated from Duke, I moved back to London. Our family business is high-end real estate. I just had a lot of fun. And my mother and stepfather, in particular, were being very nice. I lived in one of the properties they developed. I had an allowance. It’s quite ridiculous when I think about it now.

"If you come from a privileged background and you’re taking the financial support, you start to think it’s your right to have it. I just became entitled. I had a credit card for emergencies, and it’s amazing, over time, what gets considered an emergency. Like, how often am I going to be in South Africa with this view? I need to order a bottle of wine.

My parents sat me down one day, and said, “You know, this isn’t free.” And after that sank in, I decided I was going to do it on my own. I cut up the credit card. I actually got even closer to my parents as a result because there wasn’t that financial bond. I think entitlement is the kiss of death for the soul of a human being."

 

 

 

Parenting has changed to obsessive paternalism over time. Wellmeaning parents are taking over the financial lives of young adults. They are driven by the notion of having enough money, measuring their money in terms of today's rupee. Two personal financial dictums to remember here are: money is a limited resource and inflation is a killer. Also, Indian parents do not enjoy government-sponsored retirement benefits or social security.

Every rupee spent doting on an adult child cuts ..

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4 responses to “Subsidizing Grown Kids: The view from the other side of the helping hand”

  1. Donna Avatar

    We made a decision to help our children with whatever we could. Our resources are not large so it came mostly in the form of a place to stay. 2 stay here and one pays rent, the other is pursuing a masters and has worked so hard to get a graduate assistant job so he could get lower tuition. It feels right. When I think he isnt appreciating our efforts we have a serious talk…..he lived on his own for 8 years – 2 in a foreign country. I don’t worry about him very much….but I do htink we are all invested in his masters, and he needs the masters to pursue the career he has chosen. every case is different. And when people make disparaging remarks about them living here……well they only do it once.

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  2. penny Avatar

    it is such a personal decision–whether or not to help out our children financially. To me the key has always been the entitlement thing. If our kids are working toward an important goal (like a master’s degree), why shouldn’t we help out if we can afford it. Better now than later when they no longer need it–and we won’t be there to see how much it helped. But if they are not moving forward in their lives, are just waiting for a hand out or are living waaaay beyond their means–well, for me that’s a different story with a different ending.

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  3. 1010ParkPlace Avatar

    Bravo to Carter! So many of my entitled college class are either alcoholics or dead. They never had to do anything but figure out how to entertain themselves on a daily basis. What a waste! Brenda

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  4. penny Avatar

    Yes, thanks for the reminder that there is a high-waste side to letting grown children believe they are entitled. It goes way beyond Carter’s “emergency” bottle of wine in South Africa.

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