Albuquerque Journal

COVID prompts move to teach financial literacy

Seven states now require such a course to graduate high school

- BY ELAINE S. POVICH STATELINE.ORG (TNS)

Studies have long shown that high school students are woefully uninformed about personal finances and how to manage them. But the COVID-19 pandemic, which revealed how many American adults live on the financial edge, has boosted ongoing efforts to make financial literacy lessons a school requiremen­t.

Seven states now require a stand-alone financial literacy course as a high school graduation requiremen­t, and five additional states’ requiremen­ts take effect in the next year or two. About 25 mandate at least some financial training, sometimes as part of an existing course. This year, another 20 states or so have considered setting or expanding similar rules.

Opponents of the state mandates say the requiremen­ts, while laudable, can infringe on limited time available for other high school electives and would impose costly teacher training or hiring requiremen­ts.

Nonetheles­s, the financial literacy courses are catching on.

“I think there’s a lot of momentum now; a lot more states have legislatio­n in progress,” said Carly Urban, an economics professor at Montana State University who has studied financial literacy. In seven states — Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, Mississipp­i, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia — “almost every school requires it,” she said, though some graduation prerequisi­tes don’t take effect until 2023.

In the past couple of years, Nebraska, Ohio, Rhode Island and, most recently, Florida, have passed laws making financial literacy a must in high schools in the next year or two. In North Carolina, graduation requiremen­ts take effect in 2023.

Thirty-four states and the District of Columbia have had bills addressing financial literacy in the 2021-22 legislativ­e sessions, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Of those, about 20 focus on high schools.

Bills in Kentucky and the District of Columbia appear to take into account that student-athletes now are allowed to earn money for the use of their name, image or likeness. Neither of the measures mandates that high schools teach financial literacy. But the Kentucky bill, which the governor signed, requires colleges to set up financial literacy workshops for student-athletes. The D.C. bill would encourage colleges with student-athletes to teach financial literacy.

Last month, Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill calling for students who enter high school in the 2023-24 school year to take a financial literacy course as a graduation requiremen­t. The new law calls for a half-credit course in personal money management, including how to set up and use a bank account, the meaning of credit and credit scores, types of savings and investment­s, and how to get a loan.

In a signing ceremony, DeSantis touted the law as something that will “help improve students’ ability in financial management, for when they end up in the real world.”

Financial literacy is one issue that is remarkably bipartisan. Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee, a Democrat, sounded a lot like DeSantis when he signed Rhode Island’s requiremen­t for financial literacy education in high schools last year.

“Financial literacy is key to a young person’s future success,” McKee said. “This legislatio­n paves the way for our public high schools to provide young people with the skills they need to achieve their financial goals.”

Montana State’s Urban said the state policies that require standalone financial literacy courses help students the most, particular­ly if the states set standards on the subjects that must be included in the curriculum. Most of the courses go for a half-year.

Some states use materials provided by the nonprofit Next Gen Personal Finance — which offers a free study guide and classroom materials for teaching financial literacy — to help set the standards, while others have expanded units already included in economics, math or social studies courses.

Next Gen’s free courses include tutorials for teachers, along with classroom study guides on such subjects as managing credit, opening checking and savings accounts, budgeting, paying for college, investing, paying taxes and developing consumer skills.

In a 2018 study, only one-third of adults could answer at least four of five financial literacy questions on such concepts as mortgages, interest rates, inflation and risk, according to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s investor education foundation. Financial literacy was lower among people of color and younger people.

About 16% of 15-year-old U.S. students surveyed in 2018 did not reach the baseline level of financial literacy proficienc­y, according to the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

But, with some education, those numbers can improve, according to Urban’s studies.

“The findings are stark,” she said in a phone interview. “Credit scores go up and delinquenc­y rates fall. If you are a student loan borrower, you shift to low interest from high, and you don’t rack up credit card debt, and you don’t use private loans, which are more expensive.” In addition, her research revealed that young people who have taken some financial literacy courses are less likely to use expensive payday loans.

Even the teachers who lead the courses tend to experience an uptick in savings.

“If access remains limited — particular­ly for students who have the most to gain from the education — state policy may be the only option for guaranteei­ng all students have access to personal finance prior to becoming financiall­y independen­t,” Urban wrote in a 2022 study of high school personal finance courses.

The California Assembly Committee on Education unanimousl­y approved a high school financial literacy bill last week. Committee Chair Patrick O’Donnell, a Democrat and a former high school economics teacher, said such financial concepts as Individual Retirement Accounts, Roth IRAs, loan terms and other things are “difficult to get … in their heads.”

Educators need resources to teach those concepts, he said, noting that, when he was a teacher, he wrote his own course materials for financial literacy instructio­n.

The COVID-19 pandemic has underscore­d how few Americans are prepared for financial emergencie­s, giving financial literacy requiremen­ts new momentum, according to John Pelletier, director of the Center for Financial Literacy at Champlain College in Vermont. “COVID woke people up,” he said in a phone interview.

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