Saturday, March 7, 2009

"Finance Companies are Better Off With Customers Being Financially Illiterate"


Financially illiterate consumers are good for the financial sector according to Adam Levin, chief executive of the consumer education website Credit.com in yesterday's LA Times story entitled "Rescuing Teens from Economic Ignorance". In his story he talks about how adept kids are today with computer literacy, social networking and cell phone mastery. But they have no idea what balancing a checkbook, setting a budget or saving for retirement means.

Here are the highlights of the story, or low lights if you're a teenager on the verge of adulthood in today's economic environment.

  • Millions of Americans are learning the hard way about the pitfalls of teaser mortgage interest rates and runaway credit card debt. Sadly, their children may be doomed to repeat the mistakes of their overdrawn elders.
  • "We've been going for years without that education, and it's one of many factors contributing to the whole mess we're in," said Karen P. Varcoe, a consumer economics specialist for the University of California.
  • "It's kind of scary, thinking about doing this on my own," said Steffy Sulub, 17. "People our age are just let out on our own when we don't even know what to do."
  • Nearly all young people agree that acquiring good money habits and setting financial goals are crucial to success, surveys and studies show. But high school seniors correctly answered fewer than half the questions on a 2008 test of basic finance knowledge, said the Jump$tart Coalition, a financial literacy group.
  • And, although most young people attribute their financial knowledge to their parents, only 30% of students surveyed for Charles Schwab said their parents tried to provide some economic education.
  • It's a dangerous cycle, said Adam Levin, chief executive of the consumer education website Credit.com. Parents are so preoccupied with -- or embarrassed by -- their financial affairs that they don't take time to mentor their children about money.
  • The good news, Varcoe said, is that teens are keenly interested in learning about money. Arming them with some fundamentals may help them weather the next recession better than their parents are faring now.
As Levin stated, financial institutions make huge profits from the fiscally uneducated masses. So do your kids a huge favor. Besides teaching them how to drive a car, respect their elders and to do unto others as you'd have them do unto you, teach them about managing their money before they have any to manage. Few of us received that education growing up in the '60s, '70s and '80s and were forced to learn the hard way. Make sure your children fare better.

And while you're at it, treat yourself to a little updated financial knowledge. What's happening with today's economy is wreaking havoc on everyone's portfolio. Make sure you're better prepared for the next financial downturn since it may appear when you're on the cusp of retirement. There are plenty that are willing to help, but YOUR future financial independence starts with YOU taking the reigns.

As dire as the news is coming out of Wall Street and Washington, opportunity exists. Looking past the headlines to find it takes a little moxie, but you have the power to shape your financial future right now. If you don't see the opportunity, find someone who does and listen to what they have to say. Even if you don't agree, at least you took the time to explore options and listen to alternative theories to staying put and waiting for the market to rebound. You may learn something that you can implement at another time...and maybe gain knowledge that you can impart to your children.

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