Manila Bulletin

BSP drive teaches kids value of saving

- By SIEGFRID ALEGADO (Bloomberg) NESTOR ESPENILLA

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) new hero is Raj Hortaleza, aged 11. While most of his friends trooped to shopping malls to spend their Christmas money last holidays, Hortaleza put the $57 he received in the bank, adding to the $2 per week allowance he’s been saving.

“My parents always tell me not to spend too much on unnecessar­y things,” he said. “In case of an emergency, I can use it for something more important.”

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas wants more like him to raise one of the lowest savings rates in Asia and help sustain the nation’s economic growth. Six out of 10 Filipino adults don’t put money aside and most of those who do keep it in piggy banks or safe boxes, according to the central bank. So it is targeting kids to try to instill the saving habit.

“It’s strategic,” said Governor Nestor Espenilla, 59, who championed inclusion programs such as the use of electronic wallets and better credit access for farmers and rural entreprene­urs when he was a central bank deputy. “Preference­s that are formed in early life stay into adulthood.”

The central bank has expanded the availabili­ty of deposit accounts for children and teenagers, published comic books and made lesson plans about financial planning for high-school teachers.

As a proportion of its population, the Philippine­s has the most adults without a deposit account in Southeast Asia, according to World Bank estimates. It’s a deficit which the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund says the nation needs to narrow to sustain over 6 percent growth, among the world’s fastest.

In the past, most Filipinos were subsistenc­e farmers with little spare cash to save. But the country has thrown off its mantle of “Asia’s sick man” and strong domestic consumptio­n has kept economic growth fizzing. A steady flow of funds from an outsourcin­g boom, record-low interest rates, and Philippine workers abroad sending money home have helped raise disposable incomes and lifted at least 2 million people out of poverty this decade, according to World Bank estimates.

“It’s been proven that Filipinos don’t plan finances because they weren’t taught about it,” said Alvin Ang, an economics professor at Ateneo de Manila University who has studied how households save and invest. “Traits of financial planning – even just saving – are things that are acquired from parents or elders.”

Ang said in many regions of the country, people historical­ly have relied on community support to survive and the areas that have the strongest links to savings are the ones prone to major natural disasters such as typhoons or volcanic eruptions.

A key to the success of the central bank drive will be to ensure those who are educating the children also save, Ang said. “You can’t teach about saving if you don’t save,” he said. “It’s easy to say, but it’s hard to do.”

Policy makers last year raised the age limit to 19 years from 12 years for a savings account that can be opened with just a $2 deposit. The product, known locally as “Kiddie Accounts” was first unveiled nationally in 2011 and now has about 1.4 million accounts, central bank data show. Together, they contain about $577 million, a total that’s risen by almost one third in the past three years.

Developing financial management skills at an early age lessens social and financial vulnerabil­ity and reduces the risk of poverty, according to the United Nations. More than two fifths of the 107 million Filipinos will be below the age of 20 at the end of 2018, the government statistics agency estimates. That makes it one of the youngest countries in Asia.

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