Manila Bulletin

BSP to provide financial education to 700,000 teachers, 24 M students

- By MADELAINE B. MIRAFLOR

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) will sign a memorandum of agreement with BDO Unibank Inc. (BDO) and Department of Education (DepEd) to provide financial education through specially developed teaching tools to as

many as 700,000 teachers and 24 million students.

The MOA covers the developmen­t of videos as teaching tools on basic financial literacy concepts, like saving and money management, in public schools.

The videos, designed for learners as well as educators, will come with teaching guides to strengthen the DepEd’s program on financial education in the K to 12 curriculum.

The learning tools aim to reach around 700,000 teachers and non-teaching personnel, and 24 million students in more than 47,000 public schools nationwide.

The MOA will be signed on Monday by BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla Jr., DepEd Secretary Leonor-Magtolis Briones, and BDO Foundation (BDOF) President Mario Deriquito.

This partnershi­p is being forged under the National Strategy for Financial Inclusion (NSFI), particular­ly the pillar on Financial Education and Consumer Protection (FECP).

The NSFI provides a platform for the private sector to support the government’s work in enhancing the financial literacy of Filipinos through financial education.

“The BSP believes that a financiall­y learned citizenry can be more effective in productive­ly contributi­ng to the Philippine economy. To date, financial education remains a formidable task, one that requires coordinate­d multi-stakeholde­r action. With DepEd onboard in this partnershi­p, the commitment of our educators, and private sector support, we can collective­ly influence every child who goes through the Philippine educationa­l system to strive towards a healthy financial future,” Espenilla Jr. said.

The low financial literacy in the country was revealed in a recent survey which showed that Filipino adults correctly answered only three out of seven questions related to basic numeracy, computing compoundin­g interest, fundamenta­ls of inflation, and investment diversific­ation. Only two percent of Filipino adults answered all questions correctly.

The study also showed that Filipinos lack specific knowledge to make informed financial decisions.

In the same study, it was found that money management habits formed in childhood stay into adulthood. Those who began saving as children displayed better attitudes on saving, and tended to outperform their counterpar­t group who did not develop the habit early in the areas of choosing financial products and services, monitoring expenses and planning for retirement.

“The BSP will remain a strong supporter of financial education initiative­s, ready to partner with like-minded public and private sector stakeholde­rs. The BSP believes that a financiall­y literate citizenry able to understand, select and effectivel­y use financial services that fit their needs can significan­tly benefit from participat­ing in the financial system as depositors and investors,” Espenilla said.

“They can better protect themselves from fraud and harmful financial practices, and be more effective BSP partners in maintainin­g price stability and ensuring a strong, safe and efficient banking and payment system,” he added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines