The greatest wealth you can leave your children isn't money, says CA. He shares what it is

Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik believes a financial mindset is the greatest asset. He argues money and physical assets are vulnerable to economic changes. A wealthy mindset, however, offers resilience and lasting prosperity. Teaching financ...

CA explained that genuine generational wealth is created by teaching the next generation. (Istock- Representative images)
When people think about building generational wealth, they often picture crores in inheritance, valuable real estate or a thriving family business. But according to Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik, the most valuable thing parents can leave behind cannot be measured in rupees. In his view, true wealth is not about the size of an inheritance but about the financial mindset passed from one generation to the next.

CA Nitin Kaushik recently shared his thoughts on X, arguing that the greatest asset a wealthy person can pass on to their children is not a large inheritance or prime property. Instead, he believes it is the ability to think about money wisely and make sound financial decisions.

According to Kaushik, money and physical assets are far more vulnerable than many people realise. Cash can lose value because of inflation, businesses can fail, and even valuable properties may have to be sold during difficult market conditions. By contrast, he described a wealthy mindset as something far more resilient. Once a person understands how money works and develops the discipline to manage it effectively, those skills cannot easily be taken away by changing economic conditions.



Kaushik explained that genuine generational wealth is created by teaching the next generation how to analyse risk, allocate capital efficiently and view money as a tool for creating opportunities rather than simply spending it on consumption. He stressed that financial education is just as important as financial inheritance. According to him, giving children money without teaching them how to preserve, grow and manage it responsibly can have the opposite effect.


Kaushik warned that parents who hand over wealth without passing on financial discipline may unintentionally set their children up to lose that wealth quickly. In his view, lasting prosperity depends less on what is inherited and more on the knowledge, habits and mindset that accompany it. For Kaushik, the strongest legacy parents can leave is not simply wealth itself, but the financial wisdom that enables future generations to protect, grow and use that wealth responsibly.
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