GINTA: Let’s include financial literacy in our children’s education
HERE’S SOME SOBERING NEWS from a recent article in The Globe and Mail: 46 per cent of Canadians are within $200 of financial insolvency at each month-end. Blame it on higher interest rates, but also on less than desirable financial literacy.
In October of last year, a survey by debt consolidation firm BDO Canada revealed that approximately 3 in 10 Canadians do not have enough money to buy the things they need. They still buy them in the end but get deeper into debt. Among those who carry debt, the average non-mortgage debt hovers around $20,000.
According to the survey, women and millennials are most impacted. Half of the surveyed millennials feel they do not know enough about buying a home, dealing with unexpected costs and ultimately living a financially-savvy life. One third of people between the ages of 30 to 50 have no retirement funds; they are most likely to have debt and six out of ten reported a credit card balance.
Age is just a number, that is true in a philosophical way, but real life can turn rough and ugly when unexpected costs arise, which they do. It’s been said by many already: Canadians are drowning in debt. Moreover, many children grow up with a skewed idea about what’s financially feasible and what’s not.