Financial Literacy Month: What Makes a Great Financial Literacy Strategy?

Financial Literacy Month: What Makes a Great Financial Literacy Strategy?

Financial Literacy Month: Fundamentals of Financial Literacy. A quality benefits strategy should include financial literacy tools to better support employees.

April is Financial Literacy Month, which recognizes the role that financial education plays in a person’s long-term success and stability.

Without the right education, your employees are much more susceptible to financial hardship. According to a Forbes Advisor survey, 68% of Americans say financial regrets from 2023 caused them stress in the following year. However, compensation alone isn’t enough to cultivate a worker’s financial well-being.

Successful financial literacy requires a holistic approach, one that recognizes financial stress as a complex issue and offers many solutions to help address employee pain points. Here are the key components of a successful financial literacy strategy, plus how you can use the right benefits to improve the quality of life for your team.

A fact about financial stress and Financial Literacy Month.

1. Budgeting and saving skills are the foundation of financial literacy.

Unfortunately, 44% of Americans can’t pay $1,000 for an emergency expense from their savings. So when a financial emergency occurs, they may be forced to rely on credit cards, personal loans or other types of consumer debt. Employees need a reliable savings account to face tough financial setbacks, and building savings starts with the right budget.

Employee financial wellness programs are the first line of defense when it comes to teaching employees to budget and save. These helpful, interactive platforms teach foundational financial skills through a mixture of reading materials, interactive tools and customizable financial guidance.

These programs are in high demand among employers and workers alike. In PNC’s Financial Wellness in the Workplace Study, 80% of employees said they would stay longer with an employer that offered more financial wellness benefits.

2. Debt management skills help employees plan for a debt-free future.

Understanding how debt works is one of the most important aspects of employee financial literacy. The average American adult holds around $104,215 in debt across mortgages, auto loans, student loans and credit cards, according to data from the Federal Reserve. The average debt for Millennials alone rose more than 8% in 2023.

Dealing with long-term debt issues can lead employees to postpone other major financial decisions like buying homes, getting married or starting a family. According to a Bankrate survey, nearly 60 percent of U.S. adults with student debt have put off making important financial decisions due to that debt. Delaying major milestones puts employees behind their peers and makes it difficult to build long-term wealth.

To combat debt, employers can use a variety of strategies, including loan contribution plans and tuition reimbursement. Look for tools to help employees visualize and track the repayment process, with an emphasis on understanding interest costs.

3. Don’t overlook retirement and investing skills.

The ability to save for a secure future is one of the most important reasons to teach financial literacy. Retirement plans are core to building a solid foundation, but many Americans are still not saving enough. 

According to the St. Louis Federal Reserve, in April of 2023, personal savings only accounted for 4.1% of disposable personal income. This means that Americans are saving only a small percentage of their wages, which won’t be enough to fully support a retirement plan. These numbers also represent a sharp decline from the pandemic when the majority of Americans saved upwards of 30% of their income in April of 2020. Without a proper savings plan, employees may have to work past retirement age.

While employer-sponsored retirement benefits are almost always offered to full-time employees, many workers overlook their existing benefits due to a lack of education. Use your financial literacy strategy to target retirement planning. Doing so can improve the take rate of your existing benefits and help employees feel more confident planning for the future. In a 2023 MetLife study, 62% of employees said understanding how to use their benefits would give them more financial stability.

4. A successful financial literacy strategy knows that accessibility is key.

Although online resources built to improve financial literacy are out there, it doesn’t mean they are all accurate or accessible. Education for all ages, incomes and experience levels is the most important factor for a successful financial wellness program. Even employees earning more than $100,000 a year struggle with debt and issues paying bills.

In fact, financial concerns can be completely different based on the individual’s age group. According to Business Insider, building a savings account is one of the most pressing stressors for Gen Z, while older millennials are generally more concerned about credit card debt. Both of these issues require specific solutions and it can be difficult for employees to find the answers they are looking for.

A financial wellness benefit offers an all-in-one package where employees can ask questions and learn how to avoid common pitfalls.

Best Money Moves is a mobile-first financial wellness solution designed to help dial down employees’ most top-of-mind financial stresses. As an easy-to-use financial well-being solution, Best Money Moves offers comprehensive support toward any money-related goal. With 1:1 money coaching, budgeting tools and other resources, our AI platform is designed to help improve employee financial well-being.

Whether it be retirement planning or securing a mortgage, Best Money Moves can guide employees through the most difficult financial times and topics. We have robust benefits options for employers, regardless of their benefits budget.

Our dedicated resources, partner offerings and 1000+ article library make Best Money Moves a leading benefit in bettering employee financial wellness.

To learn more about Best Money Moves Financial Wellness Platform, let’s schedule a call. Contact us and we’ll reach out to you soon.

Will Increasing Financial Literacy Reduce Overall Financial Stress?

Will Increasing Financial Literacy Reduce Overall Financial Stress?

Financial Literacy Can Reduce Overall Financial Stress and Increase Financial Wellness, Survey Says

Nearly 90 percent of Americans believe financial literacy courses should be a high school graduate requirement. An annual consumer survey highlights growing concerns about financial stress. The survey, which was conducted by Equifax, follows a 2017 American Psychological Association study that found money to be one of the top stress-inducing concerns for Americans.

When consumers from the Equifax survey were asked to grade themselves on their basic level of financial literacy, only 39 percent of surveyed consumers gave themselves a “B”, while 33 percent of consumers between the ages of 18-29 gave themselves a “C.”

Because so few Americans get financial literacy classes in high school, Equifax will make financial information and education more accessible to its consumers. Dann Adams, president of Global Consumer Solutions at Equifax, said the company will provide “the fundamentals and basic credit essentials to help consumers establish the right habits early on.”

“We want to help consumers get to an ‘A’ grade, which is why we’re studying and offering new ways to help them improve their financial literacy grade,” Adams added.

Should Financial Literacy Be Required For Graduation?   

Currently, each state sets its own requirements for high school graduation, although there are federal guidelines. While few states currently mandate financial literacy, some 30 percent of states are already looking for ways to incorporate financial literacy into high school curriculum.

What Are Results of Financial Literacy Education?

In schools where a full semester of financial literacy was required a FINRA Investor Education Foundation report card showed significant improvement in credit scores for young adults aged 18 to 22. A separate study conducted by Ohio State University’s Center for the Study of Student Life found that students who had completed financial literacy courses are less affected by financial stress.

What If Your School Did Not Offer Financial Literacy Education?

While more students in the future will likely receive financial literacy education, what about adults? “Consumers often think that because they didn’t do well in high school math, that they can’t manage their finances, but that’s just not true,” said Ilyce Glink, CEO of Best Money Moves, a mobile-first financial wellness app that helps people measure their level of financial stress.

“I believe that everyone can do about 95% of whatever they need to do with their money themselves. You don’t need a professional to help you figure out a budget or shop around for car insurance to get the best deal. You can easily learn to implement those cost-saving and financial management strategies yourself,” she said.

College Costs Are Outpacing Most People’s Income Growth – by a Lot

College Costs Are Outpacing Most People’s Income Growth – by a Lot

College costs a lot. In fact, today’s college students are taking on unprecedented amounts of debt to pay for an education – they hope – will lead to better career prospects down the road.

Watching Millennials struggle under this load of student debt can be confusing for older generations who could put themselves through school by working summer jobs. But it’s not that today’s students are lazy or unwilling to work; they just have to pay more for college. A lot more.

A recent study by ProPublica took a state-by-state look at median income and yearly tuition at public four-year colleges and universities, including the District of Columbia. It found that while the national median income fell about 7 percent between 2000 and 2014, the cost of college tuition rose by 80 percent!

Every single state saw a bump in tuition costs. Median incomes increased in 19 states, but none of these increases came close to offsetting the college costs in those states.

Arizona had the highest tuition increase of any state, at 202 percent, with a 10 percent drop in the state’s median income. In contrast, Wyoming had the smallest tuition hike. The cost of higher education in that state rose just 12 percent from 2000 to 2014 and the state’s median income rose 2 percent.

With numbers like that, it’s no wonder students turn to loans to fund their education and struggle to pay off their hefty tuition bills for years afterward.

Luckily, there are some things parents and students can do now to help pay for education and reduce stress in the future:

  • Save early. In an ideal world, you would start saving for your kids’ education as soon as they’re born. This is difficult to do in the real world, especially with the increased expenses that come with a new child. Still, as early as you can start putting money into a 529 account. Those funds will grow tax free in the plan as long as you use the funds for approved college expenses.
  • Search out scholarships and grants. While your child’s school of choice may offer them some scholarships to defray their attendance costs, look for outside sources as well. There are innumerable organizations offering scholarships to students fitting their criteria. There are scholarships for kids who attended a certain high school, children of people in certain professions (like the military, law enforcement and others) and children whose parents have certain illnesses or disabilities. A little bit of online digging could uncover a wealth of resources to help pay for school.
  • Start your degree at a community college. Most states have a community college program that feeds into top state universities. Investigate the community college system near your home. It’s possible you’ll be able to spend your first two years of college paying a few hundred dollars per semester and then transfer your credits and collect your degree from the big name university. That play would allow you to get your degree for roughly half price.
  • If you get offered a scholarship, take it. You’d think that with college costs as high as they are, students would jump at the chance for a scholarship. But the “brand name” college experience has been, well, branded into our brains as being something so much better that it’s worth taking on piles of debt over essentially a free or half-price education at a smaller college or university. Balderdash! It’s a far smarter move to take the scholarship and get out of college with little or no debt than it is to get that Ivy League degree. Ten years after graduation, you’ll be really happy not to have an extra $100,000 of student debt weighing you down.