Surveys
US Millennials Aren't Clued Up Enough About Finance - Government Survey

Coming shortly after a survey of US “millennials” (aged 18-34) showed they are cautious about money, a new survey shows this age group is dangerously ill informed about money, a disturbing finding at a time when debt and future retirement costs are major issues.
Coming shortly after a survey of US “millennials” (aged 18-34)
showed they are cautious about money, a new survey shows this age
group is dangerously ill informed about money, a disturbing
finding at a time when debt and future retirement costs are major
issues in such countries.
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s Investostor
Education Foundation’s study, called The Financial Capability of
Young Adults - A Generational View, found that this age group
displays “low levels of financial literacy, engage in problematic
financial behaviours and express concerns about their debt”.
Only 24 per cent of millennials quizzed by FINRA are able to
correctly answer four or five questions on a five-question
financial literacy. And among young millennials – those 18 to 26
– only 18 per cent were able to answer four or five questions
correctly.
The results will also interest the wealth management industry
which realises that future clients will be drawn from the ranks
of the younger generation.
The results of the study have been issued at the inaugural
meeting of the President's Advisory Council on Financial
Capability for Young Americans, FINRA said in a statement.
The results will cause concern as young US citizens, along with
their peers in other nations, face issues such as college debt
and pressures on traditional tax-funded pay-as-you go retirement
schemes amid ageing population profiles. The findings come after
TD Bank, part of Toronto-Dominion Bank, issued a survey showing
millennials are highly cautious about money matters.
"Many millennials began their adult lives in the midst of the
worst economic downturn in generations, and our survey reveals
just how deeply and broadly the Great Recession has marked the
financial lives of this generation of Americans. Unfortunately,
far too many millennials trying to cope with these economic
conditions have low levels of financial literacy and are
wrestling with concerns about their debt," said FINRA Foundation
President Gerri Walsh.
The Financial Capability of Young Adults paints a troubling
portrait of this generation's behaviour and attitudes in an era
of high underemployment and unemployment, a sluggish economy and
tight credit markets, FINRA said.
Almost half (46 per cent) of millennials are concerned they have
too much debt, slightly less but on par with gen Xers (50 per
cent) – but much higher than the 38 per cent of baby boomers and
23 per cent of respondents from the silent generation who feel
they have too much debt.
Some 43 per cent of millennials engaged in costly non-bank forms
of borrowing in the last five years, like using pawn shops and
pay day lenders. By contrast, 21 per cent of boomers and 8
percent of the silent generation used non-bank forms of
borrowing.
The FINRA Foundation's new study is based on an examination of
data from the FINRA Foundation's National Financial Capability
Study (State-by-State Survey), which was developed in
consultation with the US Department of the Treasury, other
federal agencies and the President's Advisory Council on
Financial Capability. Figures from the State-by-State Survey were
collected through an online survey of 25,509 American adults
(approximately 500 per state, plus D.C.), over a four-month
period, July – October 2012.