The Centre hosts parliamentary financial education event in collaboration with MyBnk, RedStart and Young Enterprise

29/03/21

Today, the Centre for Financial Capability hosted a parliamentary drop-in event, in collaboration with key UK financial education organisations MyBnk, RedStart and Young Enterprise. The event presented a unique opportunity to highlight the benefits of financial education from a young age to attending parliamentarians, and what actions can be taken to ensure all children have the opportunity to learn the skills needed to have a good financial future.

During the event, financial education charities and parliamentarians came together to show their support for greater financial education early intervention across the UK. Parliamentarians had the opportunity to sign a letter to the Prime Minister to highlight the need to ensure that every child in the UK is equipped with the necessary tools to develop the skills and behaviours necessary to navigate critical financial decisions in later life, starting at primary school.

The letter states that “the gap in our education system has left our children unprepared for the real world, and we must act quickly to combat the national financial capability crisis, which has been even more devastated since Covid-19 and the cost-of-living crisis.” It goes on to say that this increased economic uncertainty has had huge consequences, with many young people now turning to payment schemes such as Buy Now Pay Later to afford essential items. Parliamentarians argue that the worsening crisis highlights the “urgent need to equip the next generation with the financial literacy skills they will need later in life.”

Parliamentarians are calling on the Prime Minister to implement three key recommendations:

  1. Ensure every primary aged child receives an effective and high-quality financial education by 2030.

  2. Use unclaimed assets set to be unlocked from the saving and investment sector to fund the development and delivery of financial education in primary-aged children.

  3. Give teachers access to resources and support they’ll need to deliver financial education.

 John Penrose, MP for Weston-Super-Mare said:

“I was delighted to attend The Centre’s drop-in event in parliament. The cost-of-living crisis is having a significant effect on our young people and it is crucial as parliamentarians that we use every tool available to us to ensure we can support them to build better financial resilience to protect against future economic crises.

Financial education is the key to elevating young students, and with them, levelling up our country. Equipped with the right tools, young people can start understanding and managing money with positive habits that will serve them all their lives.”  

Stewart Perry, Director of The Centre for Financial Capability commented:

“The Centre was delighted to convene some of the UK’s leading financial education stakeholders to visit parliament to discuss the huge benefits of financial education from an early age. It is clear more must be done to increase the UK’s financial literacy rates and wellbeing, which is more important than ever given the current cost-of-living crisis.

As adult money habits form around the age of 7, we believe an ounce of ‘prevention’ really is worth a pound of ‘cure’. The Government must properly invest in financial education from an early age to ensure future generations are better equipped to handle economic instability and crisis.”