Buffett:
Teach kids financial literacy to spark entrepreneurship
Send a link to a friend
[May 20, 2014]
By Luciana Lopez
NEW YORK (Reuters)
—
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett has a double life -
as a cartoon character. In his "Secret Millionaires
Club," an animated series online and on television,
Buffett teaches a group of kids about financial literacy
and entrepreneurship.
|
In real life, the club includes an annual "Grow Your Own Business
Challenge" for kids who come up with business ideas.
The winners were chosen on Monday: Beaux Up, a customizable bow tie
business by 15-year-old Jake Johnson of North Carolina in the
individual competition; and WiseGuide, an intergenerational online
community, from Krystal and Allyson Graylin and Kei Chua from
Seattle, Washington, in the team contest.
The winners each received $5,000, and all finalists received 10
Berkshire Class B shares, worth $1,271 at the closing of the market
on Monday.
Buffett, the third-richest person on the Forbes list of wealthiest
people and the chairman and chief executive of conglomerate
Berkshire Hathaway, took some time to talk to Reuters about kids,
financial literacy and why he still bets big on the U.S. economy.
The questions and answers have been edited and condensed for length
and clarity.
Q. Are you seeing any trends among the entries?
A. There's a greater tech aspect to some of the entries than
there was in the past. They know a lot at age 10 or 11 that I don't
know at age 83. They're incorporating into their projects tech
features now even more than a couple years ago.
Q. Are they changing your own feelings on the tech sector?
A. I've always said I don't know enough about tech to compete
with the rest of the world, and I don't think I know enough to
compete with a bunch of 12-year-olds.
Q. How do financial literacy and entrepreneurship fit
together?
[to top of second column] |
A. Not everybody's going to be an entrepreneur, but everybody
should be financially literate. Financial literacy is a base
requirement like spelling or reading or something of the sort that
everybody should acquire at any early age. The financial habits you
develop when you are young are going to go with you into your
adulthood. But you can't be an entrepreneur unless you're
financially literate.
Q. How do you make entrepreneurship interesting to kids
beyond just running a contest?
A. Once they think of (entrepreneurship), they keep thinking
of it. And then if they get the right lessons they're going to
succeed at it and succeed breeds success.
Q. Is this part of your optimism in America?
A. Absolutely. The best country to be born in still is the
United States, and the best time to be born is today.
(Reporting by Luciana Lopez; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|