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Daily business news and economic stories
  • Curtis Larson and his daughter Erin Anderson look back at the way he let the kids in the family take responsibility for their own money, even if they made mistakes.

  • Oregon's West Linn High School.
    Tess Vigeland

    Tess Vigeland pays a visit to her old high school just outside Portland, Ore., to learn how teachers are now instructing students about money, and why more schools don't provide financial education.

  • In their new memoir, "The Kids Are All Right," Liz and Diane Welch chronicle how the death of their parents, and the financial mess left behind, led them to have different outlooks on money.

  • For kids who are in and out of foster care, learning about money can be especially difficult. Steve Chiotakis pays a visit to Pathways L.A., a program that teaches foster kids about living on their own.

  • Andrea Domanick, a senior at Wesleyan University, talks about the importance of parents teaching their kids about money.

  • Nancy Hammond and her 12-year-old daughter Elisabeth talk about what they really need, and how it's important to keep others in mind when thinking about money.

  • Jason Priest and his 13-year-old daughter Kennedy talk about how they went into business together, with music and gum.

  • The Kaser family of suburban Minneapolis has been hit hard by the recession. Both parents have lost their jobs, and they are no longer able to make the mortgage payments. Annie Baxter reports on how the family is coping.

  • Personal finance expert Beth Kobliner gave us a top 10 list of things parents wish their kids knew about money. Daughter Becca offers this response: a top 10 list of things kids want parents to know.

  • Elizabeth Lord and her 8-year-old son, Xander, talk about their allowance system, which taught him about paying back what he got on credit.