Your clients—and your business—can benefit from improved financial literacy
April is National Financial Literacy Month, designated by Congress as a time to teach Americans how to develop and maintain positive financial habits. And there’s certainly a significant need for improvements in financial literacy. Consider the following:
If you are not yet in that 40 percent group, you may want to start getting more involved in financial education efforts. When you do, you’ll be helping today’s clients, tomorrow’s prospects—and, possibly, your own bottom line.
While there may not be universal agreement on what defines “financial literacy,” there’s plenty of awareness of the problems stemming from lack of knowledge of basic financial and investment principles.
Perhaps one of the most noticeable signs of a deficient financial knowledge can be seen in those who, ironically, are most absorbed in education—college students. Upon graduation, the average borrower has more than $37,0005 in loans. And that’s just the average figure—many students are graduating with six-figure debts. It’s not hard to see that this type of debt load in one’s 20s can haunt individuals for decades, interfering with plans for home ownership and impacting retirement savings.
This isn’t to say that accumulating student loans is strictly a matter of financial ignorance—as you’re well aware, college is extremely expensive, and growing more so every year, and many students may have little choice but to take out loans. And yet, if they were more financially astute—especially as to the effect that their monthly loan payments will have on their disposable income—they might have found alternatives that could at least have lessened the red ink they incurred.
Signing up for credit cards that charge exorbitant interest rates could be directly related to inadequate financial literacy. And although financial scam artists may focus most intently on the elderly, they do also hit on vulnerable people of any age—people who could have better protected themselves if they had received more financial education.
Clearly, a higher degree of financial literacy would serve individuals well, in many aspects of their life. And here’s something else that will be of particular importance to you: Clients with greater financial knowledge are better clients because they know the value of guidance from a financial professional. And since they are more likely to make better moves regarding borrowing, saving and investing, they will almost certainly end up with greater financial assets than their less-educated peers—and that’s good news for professionals like you.
So, given the need for greater financial literacy, and the problems that result from lack of it, what can you do to help?
Here are a few possibilities:
In every field of human activity, more knowledge is better than less—and that’s certainly true in the financial arena. By doing your part to raise the financial intelligence of your clients, prospects and local community, you can help individuals speed their progress toward their long-term goals—while helping build more opportunities for your business in the future.