Risky Experiment

1 min read

The SBP’s recent decision to allow teenagers as young as 13 to open and operate bank accounts entirely on their own is meant to create an opportunity for children to gain financial literacy early and through hands-on experience. The new child account category is a fully functional digital wallet with almost identical usability to a standard account, except that it does not allow chequebooks, which even adults rarely use in this day and age.

Though well-intentioned, allowing children who have barely hit puberty to operate bank accounts with no oversight is a reckless gamble that goes against international norms and common sense. Financial literacy is best taught through guidance from parents and teachers, and through public awareness. Pakistan’s decision is in contrast with practices in most developed and emerging economies.

In the US, individuals must usually be at least 16 to open an account, and require close scrutiny if they do not have parental authorisation. Similarly, in the UK, 16-year-olds can open accounts, but parental consent and oversight are the norm for younger children.

The pattern holds across Asia and the EU, with Japan, Singapore and Germany among the developed nations that require people to be 18 or have parental consent. In fact, one of the few outliers is India, where recent legislation allows children as young as 10 to operate bank accounts independently.

However, keep in mind that this decision was taken by the same economic masterminds whose currency demonetisation tanked the Indian economy in 2016 while failing to convert cash users to digital.

By discarding established international safeguards, Pakistan is creating a generation of financial lab mice. While financial literacy is admittedly lacking even among parents, teenagers are still vulnerable to online scams, predatory marketing and generally impulsive behaviour.

Independent access to bank accounts also opens the possibility that children may unwittingly engage in questionable investment activities if safeguards are not in place. The SBP must reconsider this decision and bump up the minimum ages to at least 16.

Editorial Published in Express Tribune on April 8th, 2026.

Previous Story

Premature Babies Face Rising Risk of Preventable Blindness: Report

Next Story

Federal Govt Approves Child-friendly Curricula to Ease Early Schooling Burden

Latest from Blog

Ghotki Police Register Gang Rape FIR

SUKKUR: The Ghotki police have registered a gang rape case against some influential figures of Adilpur and their several associates on May 19 after much uproar on social media over the “horrific and inhuman treatment” allegedly meted out to the victim. The 15-year-old seemingly devastated girl had narrated her ordeal…

The Polio Fight Goes On

It is enough of an ignominy that this country is one of only two, the other being Afghanistan, where polio still remains endemic. However, it is even more shameful that even those brave souls who are trying to eradicate this disease from the country are routinely the target of violent,…

Five Children Die Within a Week as Measles Outbreak Hits Sujawal Coastal Belt

THATTA: A severe measles outbreak has triggered widespread panic across the coastal belt of the Shahbunder taluka (sub-district) in Sujawal district, where five children have died within a week and more than 20 others are reportedly suffering from the highly contagious disease across various villages. According to local sources, the…

Sana Yousaf’s Killer Gets Death Sentence

ISLAMABAD: An Islamabad sessions court sentenced Umar Hayat, the main culprit in the Sana Yousaf murder case, to death on May 19 after finding him guilty of killing the teenager at her residence in June last year. Hayat was arrested a day after 17-year-old Yousaf was shot dead in her…

LHC Seeks Reply on Plea against 3-month Summer Vacations

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) on May 19 issued notices to the Punjab government and other respondents on a petition challenging the decision to close educational institutions for three months during summer vacations. Justice Khalid Ishaq heard the petition filed by the All Private Schools Federation and sought replies…
Go toTop