Adolescent Capital is a quarterly magazine designed to educate adolescents about key areas of personal finance, including budgeting, investing, saving, and understanding how money grows over time, while also emphasizing the importance of avoiding unnecessary debt and beginning to think early about building retirement security so the next generation can enter adulthood with financial confidence and long term independence. It features a range of writing styles, including articles, proposals, editorials, and poems, to engage readers in both analytical and creative ways. 

A significant percentage of Americans are not financially prepared for retirement, with roughly 40% of households reporting they have no retirement savings at all, leaving them heavily exposed to uncertainty later in life. At the same time, about 6 in 10 Americans live paycheck to paycheck, meaning most income is immediately spent on daily necessities, leaving very little room for investing or building long-term security. This combination creates an exceptionally hard reality where many people are forced to work longer than expected or enter retirement with insufficient resources, highlighting the urgency of building financial discipline very early on in life. 

I hope Adolescent Capital can help start a new trend where financial literacy becomes a cultural norm for young people, helping them think about money early on, while giving them the awareness needed to make informed decisions, avoid and step into adulthood with a stronger foundation for long-term financial independence. If we educate starting at an early age, we can become a generation of savers and investors who are less burdened by debt and better prepared to build long-term security and independence.