Most children learn more about spending in the app store than they ever learn about earning, saving or giving. Teach Profit Early is a hands-on guide to money games for kids that turn everyday life into a low-stress classroom. Designed for ages 7–16, it helps parents, carers and educators replace awkward lectures with simple experiments that fit real family routines. Drawing on family money conversations, project-based learning and child-friendly psychology, Navin Sarkhel shows how to set up an allowance system for children, run a lemonade stand with a basic profit-and-loss, design a mini-market at home or school, and turn jars and goals into a powerful needs and wants activity. Each chapter offers clear steps, sample scripts and reflection questions so adults know what to say and children know what to do. Teach Profit Early does not promise wealth. Instead, it builds practical money skills and confidence. Children practise choices about spending, saving and giving with small sums, while adults learn how to talk about mistakes, risk and tradeoffs without fear. Later chapters gently introduce saving and investing basics, including interest, compounding and simple diversified investing ideas, always as concepts, not advice. Whether you are just starting with pocket money or guiding a teen towards their first job and teen money management, this book gives you a toolkit you can return to again and again. The result is not a rigid system, but a shared language and set of games that help young people feel capable with money long before adulthood.
Teach Profit Early
SKU: 9789376553686
$39.99 Regular Price
$26.40Sale Price
- Navin Sarkhel writes for parents, carers and educators who want children to grow up relaxed and capable around money. He is drawn to practical experiments, simple language and tiny repeatable habits rather than big promises. His work focuses on helping families turn abstract ideas like value, patience and risk into everyday conversations and games. ASSUMPTION: Navin is a parent who has tested many of these activities within his own family life. Navin is fascinated by how, in traditional street markets from Mumbai to Marrakesh, children have long learned about prices, negotiation and trust by helping at family stalls. That informal education, grounded in observation and participation, shapes his approach to money learning today. He believes that modern children deserve the same kind of apprenticeship, even if their 'market' is more likely to be a school fair or a small online project. Through this book, Navin aims to give adults the confidence to talk openly about money without fear, and to give children the tools to practise using it wisely, generously and creatively.


















