Allowance (money)

[1] In the context of children, parents may provide an allowance (British English: pocket money) to their child for their miscellaneous personal spending.

The contractor may be required to produce records of the original takeoff or estimate of the costs in the second section for each allowance item.

Later, as the child grows older, some parents give children projects they can choose or ignore, and this type of allowance can be called "entrepreneurial."

A 2019 study by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants found the average allowance paid to U.S. children was $30 per week.

[6] The article stated that the husband was a professional soldier, but since his entire salary went to his wife, he had to take a second job as a construction worker to afford to buy his meals.

British Boy Scouts receiving their allowances at a fruit picking camp near Cambridge , England in 1943