Lodi News-Sentinel

It’s hard to manage credit when you’ve never heard of interest

- By Marsha Mercer

When Kentucky state Treasurer Allison Ball and a colleague talked with high school seniors last year about credit cards and other pieces of the personal finance puzzle, something wasn’t right.

“We kept using the word ‘interest’ and we kept getting blank stares,” Ball recalled. Finally, she asked the students who knew what interest is. No one did.

“Here they were, about to be adults, two weeks before graduation — and they had no idea about interest on credit card payments,” said Ball, a former bankruptcy attorney. “That’s exactly how you get into trouble.”

Kentucky is the 44th most financiall­y literate state, according to a WalletHub analysis based on 15 metrics, including the availabili­ty of high school financial literacy classes and the share of adults with rainy day funds. And the state has the eighthhigh­est personal bankruptcy rate, with 345 bankruptcy filings per 100,000 residents. But this year Kentucky launched a two-part initiative to help its residents better live within their means.

Beginning with ninth graders in 2020, Kentucky will require a financial literacy course before high school graduation. And assuming the courts allow its work-for-Medicaid plan to proceed, the state will offer financial literacy instructio­n to some Medicaid recipients who are required to work.

Kentucky’s focus on requiring financial education reflects a budding consensus among policymake­rs, academics, the finance industry and parents that states need to do more to ensure that students — and adults — learn how to manage credit, craft a budget, borrow for large purchases and save for retirement.

Three other states — Arizona, Iowa and Louisiana — also added financial literacy course requiremen­ts for high school graduation this year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

New Mexico, which already requires a high school personal finance course be offered, will study how to provide financial literacy training to foster care children and help them manage checking and savings accounts. Kansas, which does not require a course, passed a law this year requiring financial assistance for individual­s receiving compensati­on for wrongful conviction­s.

Until this year, only 17 states required a personal finance course for high school graduation, according to the Council for Economic Education’s 2018 Survey of the States.

The uptick in activity this year comes as Americans sink deeper in debt. U.S. household debt reached $13.2 trillion in the first quarter of 2018, the 15th consecutiv­e quarter increase. That’s higher than in the third quarter of 2008 during the financial crisis. Student loan debt reached a record $1.5 trillion in the first quarter of 2018.

As students have taken on more debt, more state and private universiti­es have started to offer them financial literacy workshops and counseling.

But Stacey Abrams — a Democrat running for governor of Georgia, and the former minority leader of the Georgia House of Representa­tives — knows firsthand that a top-notch education and a high-paying job are no guarantee against personal debt.

Owing more than $200,000 in credit card debt, student loan debt and federal back taxes, Abrams has a repayment plan with the IRS.

“I am in debt, but I am not alone. Debt is a millstone that weighs down more than three-quarters of Americans,” she wrote in an op-ed in Fortune, arguing that her indebtedne­ss should not keep her from becoming governor.

“I had racked up student loans, and throughout college and beyond, I’d swiftly turned every credit card applicatio­n into those magical slivers of plastic that allowed me to pay for daily necessitie­s,” she wrote.

Even when she finished Yale Law School in 1999 and landed a job paying $95,000 a year — three times more than her parents ever made combined, she said — Abrams remained mired in debt because family members needed her help. She used her credit cards again.

If elected, Abrams says she will start a Georgia FinLit Initiative with instructio­n for kids in elementary school.

For states, pressing forward on financial education means a raft of questions and answers that are likely to anger one group or another. Do we make financial literacy a condition of graduation? Will it be a stand-alone class or covered with other subjects? And, of course, how will we pay for it?

In Kentucky, policymake­rs tried and failed for at least six years before enacting the financial literacy measure into law.

“The answer to fixing this crisis long-term begins in childhood,” Ball, a Republican who has made financial literacy a priority, wrote in an op-ed endorsing the measure. “The best time to learn basic principles of saving and money management is before a person graduates from high school and enters the workforce.”

Kentucky’s work-for-Medicaid plan is currently on hold. On June 29, a federal judge stopped the rollout scheduled for July 1 and sent the plan back to the federal government, which granted the waiver that allowed Kentucky to add the requiremen­ts. The state hopes the plan will be reapproved by fall, said Adam Meier, secretary of Kentucky’s Cabinet for Health and Family Services.

If Kentucky proceeds, Medicaid recipients who fail to meet the work requiremen­ts will be offered a choice of online health or financial literacy classes. Members also will be able to take the classes to build credits toward dental or other benefits not included in their benefits package. They will learn such things as how to budget, open a bank account, balance a checkbook and deal with credit.

Nearly a third of Kentuckian­s receive Medicaid.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? U.S. household debt reached $13.2 trillion in the first quarter of this year, the 15th consecutiv­e quarter increase.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE U.S. household debt reached $13.2 trillion in the first quarter of this year, the 15th consecutiv­e quarter increase.

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