Gulf News

Only 38% of UAE adults are financiall­y literate

NATION STILL LAGS BEHIND OTHER DEVELOPED ECONOMIES

- By CLEOFE MACEDA Senior Web Reporter

Financial literacy levels in the UAE still trail behind those of major advanced economies, with only less than half of adults in the country showing an understand­ing of basic financial concepts.

This was one of the findings in the recently published Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services Global Financial Literacy Survey. The study attempted to find out how financiall­y literate people are by asking basic questions to 150,000 respondent­s in more than 140 countries.

The questions were about the four fundamenta­l concepts for financial decision-making: inflation, risk diversific­ation, basic numeracy and interest compoundin­g. Those who were able to answer at least three out of the four concepts were considered financiall­y literate.

Worldwide, only one in three (33 per cent) of adults passed the test, which means that around 3.5 billion people globally lack an understand­ing of basic concepts in finance.

In the UAE, only 38 per cent, or nearly four out of ten people, got the answers right. The figure is lower than in major advanced economies like France, Italy, Japan and the United States, where 55 per cent of the respondent­s, on average, were found to be financiall­y literate.

The UAE’s financial literacy rate ranked third among the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) countries surveyed. Kuwait topped the list (44 per cent), followed by Bahrain (40 per cent). In Saudi Arabia, 31 per cent of adults are financiall­y literate.

The countries with the highest scores were Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Israel, the Netherland­s, Norway, Sweden and United Kingdom, where 65 per cent or more of adults were considered financiall­y literate.

Disappoint­ing

The results for UAE are disappoint­ing, but not surprising, according to Andrew Prince, financial planner at deVere Acuma.

“Clearly, from the figures, where even [in] the US only just over half of those surveyed were able to demonstrat­e financial literacy, it is not surprising that a relatively new country like the UAE should have disappoint­ing figures,” Prince told Gulf News.

Prince said he had witnessed how badly people need financial education when he took part in an initiative by the Financial Services Authority, the UK’s financial regulator, that sought to enhance financial literacy with government workers in 2007.

“I was shocked that some high-flyers didn’t understand the basics when related to interest rates paid on a car loan,” he recalled.

“The key source of learning should be within academia and therefore part of the school curriculum. It’s not too late to learn and I would advocate using YouTube and search ‘the power of 72’, for as Einstein said, compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. He who understand­s it, earns it… He who doesn’t… pays it.”

Education, wealth

In S&P’s study, it was also found that Americans with less education and lower incomes didn’t do as well as their counterpar­ts in other developed, wealthy countries. Adults in the US demonstrat­ed a “relatively weak” understand­ing of compound interest, even though Americans’ credit card use is among the highest in the world, according to the World Bank Global Findex database.

“We believe there are correlatio­ns between financial literacy, financial access and the strength of markets,” said Courtney Geduldig, executive vice-president of public affairs at McGraw Hill Financial, parent company of S&P. “Addressing financial literacy is a key strategy in building stronger, more accessible and sustainabl­e markets around the globe.”

Data for the study was collected in 2014 by Gallup as part of the Gallup World Poll and analytical support was provided by researcher­s at the World Bank Developmen­t Research Group and the Global Financial Literacy Excellence Center (GFLEC) at the George Washington University.

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