
The way we live, work, and manage money has changed faster than our approach to teaching these skills.
Today, financial capability is as essential as digital literacy, yet nearly 80% of people say they’ve never received formal financial education.
As @AnaBotin writes in @thetimes, the UK government’s decision to embed financial literacy into the national curriculum for schools in England from 2028 is a major step forward, but it needs to be the beginning, not the end, of reform.
If the UK and other economies are serious about long-term resilience, three priorities are essential:
✅ Support teachers with confidence and resources.
✅ Make financial education lifelong, not just for school-age children.
✅ Help more people invest wisely, so savings keep pace with longer lives and rising retirement needs.
Knowledge drives progress. Confidence with money gives people the ability to plan, adapt, and seize opportunities. That’s why banks, governments, and educators must work together to close the gap.
Read the full piece: thetimes.com/business/econo…
#FinancialLiteracy #FinancialEducation #FutureOfFinance #LifelongLearning
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