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Your bank balance is living in your past

Sylvia Kamau by Sylvia Kamau
February 3, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Have you ever wondered why your bank balance sometimes feels like it’s stuck in a time warp? Like no matter how hard you hustle, your money habits seem to repeat themselves? The truth is, your financial behaviors today were shaped long before you ever earned your first pay cheque in your childhood, family environment and the money lessons you absorbed without even realizing it.

In Kenya, many adults enter the world of work with financial habits already baked into their thinking. While some young people grow up watching parents save a little from casual jobs or pocket money, others never see money handled responsibly at all. This early exposure matters more than most people think. Childhood experiences such as seeing parents use money for essentials or borrow to get by make deep impressions and those impressions can shape adult financial decisions without conscious awareness. Evidence from Kenyan lifestyle writers highlights that our upbringing and childhood experiences “largely inform our present financial behaviors.” For example, children who were exposed early to budgeting and saving grow into adults who naturally think about those concepts, while those who were not often struggle with them later in life.

In many Kenyan households, money isn’t talked about openly. Discussions about saving, debt, budgeting and investing are often avoided, meaning children learn by watching rather than being taught. That leads to adult habits that can feel automatic like spending everything you get, fearing banks or investments or thinking debt is normal and inevitable. This isn’t just about psychology; it connects deeply with broader financial trends in Kenya. Mobile money platforms like M-PESA have turned many Kenyans into “banked” users almost by default, but that doesn’t always translate into strong saving habits.

Fortunately, there are deliberate efforts in Kenya to change this narrative. In late 2024, Safaricom, Old Mutual and the Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development unveiled a financial literacy toolkit for junior and senior school students aimed at giving kids practical money skills early in life. The idea is that if young people learn about budgeting, saving and wise spending before adulthood, their future bank balances won’t be haunted by old patterns of money mismanagement.

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Your bank balance isn’t just a number, it’s a story. And more often than not, that story began in your childhood. The habits you formed then, sometimes inadvertently, continue to show up in how you save, spend, borrow and even think about financial goals today. Recognizing that your financial life is tied to your past is the first step toward rewriting the script.( start your investment journey today with the cytonn money market fund. Call + 254 (0)709101200 or email sales@cytonn.com)

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