The results of a recent study by the Centre for
Economics and Business Research (they’re independent – we can trust them – they’re
not part of the Government!) into the cost implications of a lack of financial
education have been made public.
It concluded that the lack of knowledge (everything
from credit cards to pensions) costs UK taxpayers over £3.4 billion every year.
That’s staggering……
3,400,000,000.00
It also found that financial education could:
- Reduce unemployment by up to 10 per cent
- Save £1.8 billion per year on subsidising
those in retirement
- Cut personal debt by £716 million a year
- Save consumers £244 million a year on
mis-selling
Whilst over 20 countries teach personal finance
in schools, the UK has lagged well behind. So far behind in fact, that they aren’t
visible in the distance.
Some good news though……from September 2014 the
UK will teach financial education to young people in mathematics and
citizenship lessons.
That just leaves the gap to be filled of the millions
who never received personal financial education. By continuing to ignore or
address will destroy future financial prosperity for too many.
It’s a start though.
Thanks Steve. I'll always remember a viewer for our house just as things about to hit the fan. She had a £10k bursary for 2nd degree and her graduate partner had his first job with Network Rail at £26k. Northern Rock were offering him 6 times his salary plus her bursary was considered. My response was "you must be mad" and explained just how expensive it is to live! I did not want them to buy our house, for their sakes.
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