HeadlinesBriefing favicon HeadlinesBriefing.com

Parents Question if Their Money Advice Still Works

Financial Times Companies •
×

Parents and adult children across the UK face a shifting financial world as old rules blur. The Financial Times invites families to share stories where advice—whether urging savings over investment, timing home purchases, or clinging to stable jobs—has backfired or proved irrelevant. Contributions will stay anonymous unless consented.

The call taps into growing doubt that university education still guarantees career success, while a flat housing market and rising AI automation reshape earning prospects. Investors and planners now weigh diversification across tech, green energy, and niche markets. Parents worry their guidance may lock kids into outdated pathways, while children feel pulled toward high‑growth sectors they never considered.

Feedback will help the FT chart how intergenerational advice shapes savings, investment, and career choices amid volatile markets. By exposing blind spots, the piece aims to prompt parents to update their counsel and young adults to question inherited wisdom. The outcome could reshape how families navigate financial planning in an era where data and technology outpace tradition.

Readers can email [email protected] to share experiences; the FT will vet names before publication. Contributions may reveal that conventional advice—like prioritising property ownership—now clashes with rising interest rates and uncertain rental yields. The dialogue will illuminate whether traditional financial wisdom remains a useful compass or a relic.