1. Introduction
A vast strand of literature over the past 25–30 years has explored whether and how much “financial literacy” can effectively improve individuals’ well-being, by helping them to manage their personal finance, from youth, when choices have lasting (possibly permanent) financial consequences, to old age, when health issues and retirement security are predominant.
This role of financial literacy (which includes basic economic concepts) is hardly surprising, since, as Alfred Marshall (Reference Marshall1890) claimed, “economics is the study of mankind in the ordinary business of life,” such that a complete lack of knowledge of its fundamental concepts can only be harmful, almost by definition. Indeed, the ordinary business of life requires individuals to make decisions involving all kinds of trade-offs, almost always having to deal with a temporal dimension, that is, implying an immediate or short-term sacrifice (benefit) against an expected gain (loss) in the future. Lacking even a basic understanding of these trade-offs can lead to poor decisions. It can thus be claimed that financial literacy – as an analytical tool to study how people build, manage, and decumulate their personal wealth – is a topic entirely in the tradition of the Franco Modigliani’s “life cycle hypothesis.”
Research, of course, has gone far beyond both Marshall’s assertion and a stylized Modigliani model and gained a remarkable place in recent economic studies. Financial (il)literacy has first been defined and extensively measured by means of surveys exploring three (and more) key concepts of basic economic understanding and numeracy and then linked to various behavioral outcomes, such as inadequate savings, low participation in pension funds, bad or whimsical investment choices, excessive personal debt, and gullibility (Lusardi and Mitchell Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2008, Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2014). More recently, new frontiers have been explored concerning the role of financial literacy in the public sphere and socially responsible choices. This is a natural extension of the research on financial literacy, given that individuals’ well-being reflects, particularly in European countries, not only personal choices but also collective decisions, typically embodied in public regulations and expenditures, often in response to a changing social and economic environment.Footnote 1
The first part of this article discusses the main findings on the relevance of financial education to decisions having important financial consequences in the life cycle, from youth to working age and retirement. While economic theory predicts that people plan for future expenditures or contingencies and retirement, they often lack, in fact, even the most basic notions of economics and finance. This is true, at different levels, in both developing and advanced economies, particularly among women and older generations (Klapper and Lusardi, Reference Klapper and Lusardi2020). We thus focus on two issues, in particular (i) the need for pension literacy (Fornero, Reference Fornero2015) and (ii) the importance of financial education to reducing gender gaps in financial performance and wealth management, both before and after retirement (Fornero, Reference Fornero2021).
Further research has provided empirical evidence on a positive correlation between financial literacy levels and important macroeconomic variables, such as national savings and wealth accumulation (Jappelli and Padula, Reference Jappelli and Padula2013), human capital (Jappelli, Reference Jappelli2010), income inequality (Lo Prete, Reference Lo Prete2013, Reference Lo Prete2018), and financial inclusion (Grohmann et al., Reference Grohmann, Klühs and Menkhoff2018). Having established that financial literacy is crucial for personal decisions and macroeconomic outcomes, the second part of this article analyses a new and growing literature exploring the link between financial literacy and public decisions, in turn influencing individual well-being. The authors of this article have opened this new path, exploring the link between basic financial knowledge and attitudes toward economic reforms (Fornero and Lo Prete, Reference Fornero and Lo Prete2019) and citizens’ participation in elections (Lo Prete, Reference Lo Prete2021).Footnote 2
2. Financial education for better personal finance
The positive effects of financial literacy on behavior have been empirically demonstrated in various critical points of one’s life: in youth, when educational choices are predominant and have long-lasting cumulative consequences; in adulthood, when work, saving, portfolio, and family formation decisions have to be made, some fairly often, others less frequently (e.g. buying a house); and in retirement, with decisions concerning when to exit the labor force, how to manage retirement wealth, and the growing need for health care.
2.1. A tool for navigating the life cycleFootnote 3
The first important decisions in life come at a young age and concern education. Notions such as human capital accumulation, expected rates of return, and opportunity costs, or interest on student loans – topics sometimes considered too dry to attract children and youth – all provide a good guide of the type of knowledge that is needed to make decisions early in the life cycle. Unfortunately, today’s youth exhibits quite a low level of financial knowledge, a matter of growing concern among governments and institutions (Lusardi and Oggero, Reference Lusardi and Oggero2017). Measurements have been provided since 2012 by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), with the addition of a module on financial literacy to the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), assessing the knowledge of 15-year-old students (see also Section 3). The latest PISA survey (OECD, 2020, reporting data on 2018) showed that a sizeable fraction of students in the 20 countries that participated in the financial literacy assessment display inadequate financial literacy (below level 2), with more top-performing boys than top-performing girls. The fact that there are no major gender differences in the mean – apart from specific countries – is encouraging as educational gaps at an early age are likely to persist throughout life, contributing to women’s economic vulnerability (see Section 2.3). Another problem in which financial illiteracy is likely to play a relevant role is the growing number of youth who are neither employed nor engaged in education or training programs (NEET).Footnote 4 Among those 16–29 years old, the European average of NEETs is 13.1%, ranging from a minimum of 5.5% in the Netherlands to 23.1% in Italy. This represents a huge social problem, which COVID-19 pandemic has likely exacerbated (Aina et al., Reference Aina, Brunetti, Mussida and Scicchitano2021). Last but not least, lack of basic financial knowledge is likely to be responsible for the widespread mistrust among youth regarding their retirement (Baldini et al., Reference Baldini, Mazzaferro and Onofri2019; Kovacs and Vaskövi, Reference Kovacs and Vaskövi2020).
How to provide financial education to children and youth has been a subject of much research, although the results are still debated. Both informal devices – such as games,Footnote 5 pocket money (Sansone et al., Reference Sansone, Rossi and Fornero2019), opening bank accounts for children (OECD, 2014), and children’s involvement in family discussions about budgeting – and formal education, in schools, have been implemented and studied. Since the latter is more structured and can (at least in principle) guarantee quality and equity of educational standards, it should be preferred, in our opinion, with other means playing a supplementary role. Starting early (i.e. in primary school) and proceeding gradually, as in any other subject, is also recommended, because financial literacy is something to be acquired early in life, like reading and writing (Lusardi, Reference Lusardi2015).
For most people, adult life starts with entry into the labor market, finding a job, earning an income, and becoming economically independent. Here, the main decisions of how to distribute income between consumption and saving and how to invest the amount that has not been consumed have become more complex than in the past. At this stage in the life cycle, individuals need to have at least some familiarity with the basic notions of risk, wealth (il)liquidity, mortgages, and, again, interest rates, gross and net of taxes and fees. In addition, workers should become familiar with economic concepts such as payroll taxes/contributions to (one or more) pension schemes and the very meaning of participation in such schemes, that is, building up pension wealth to be consumed in retirement.
Surveys have shown that individuals’ grasp of these notions is frequently either absent or inadequate, even in countries whose population performs relatively well in basic financial knowledge. For example, in the Netherlands, where respondents generally have some familiarity with basic concepts, many have no understanding of risk diversification, the difference between bonds and stocks, or the relationship between bond prices and interest rates; conversely, respondents with a higher level of financial literacy are more likely to invest in the stock market (Alessie et al., Reference Alessie, Lusardi and van Rooij2011). Analogously, less literate Swedish savers under-diversify their portfolios, do not participate in risky asset markets, and do not refinance their mortgages when it would be convenient to do so (Calvet et al., Reference Calvet, Campbell and Sodini2007).
Other studies have found a link between financial literacy and debt and debt management, such as using credit cards in expensive ways or taking up large amounts of debt or poor credit management, such as borrowing at high rates or using high-cost debt instruments, such as payday loans, pawn shops, rent-to-own products, and auto title loans (Lusardi and Tufano, Reference Lusardi and Tufano2015; Lusardi et al., Reference Lusardi, Mitchell and Oggero2020a). Financial literacy is also a determinant of the demand for life insurance (Lin et al., Reference Lin, Hsiao and Yeh2017), mainly purchased on men’s lives, reflecting their role as the (main) breadwinner in the household (Hubener et al., Reference Hubener, Maurer and Mitchell2016). Further, in the face of rather complex mortgage products, financial literacy can help people understand that low initial mortgage payments imply larger future costs (Cocco, Reference Cocco2013). Gathergood and Weber (Reference Gathergood and Weber2017) found that both impatience and poor financial literacy increase the probability of choosing mortgages with lower upfront costs but larger ensuring payments. Lusardi and Mitchell (Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2014) provide an early overview of the effects of financial literacy on many financial choices.
Finally, in the last phase of their life cycle, individuals retire from work and rely on their pension wealth and possibly other assets. This is the decumulation phase of the life cycle, with limited margins of adjustment, given that going back to work, even part-time, is rarely an option and individuals must rely on their pension and accumulated assets. The ability to develop and implement plans for a financially satisfactory retirement is thus very important. To prevent poverty in old age, in the first half of the Twentieth Century, most countries have progressively introduced and extended social security schemes and made retirement savings compulsory. This important achievement, however, is not sufficient to eliminate the risk of inadequate resources in retirement, as even public systems have from time to time to be restructured (reformed) to adapt to macro-shocks, population aging, or to redress an unsustainable design. It is thus important that people be also informed and knowledgeable about the nature of pensions and the workings of the pension system – in other words, that they master some pension literacy, since their financial well-being in old age depends on both on their own choices (as savers/investors) and on collective choices made by the state (see Section 3).
2.2. The case for pension literacy
Pension systems typically have a quite complex structure. For example, most systems are composed of multiple pillars, with both private and public schemes working in different ways and being differently financed. The public component, largely preponderant in Europe, even when it mimics the market – as does the Notional (or Non-financial) Defined Contribution (NDC) scheme (see below) – performs roles that the market does not or cannot perform, specifically take into consideration solidarity and social cohesion.
Although in public schemes individual decisions are essentially limited to whether to retire after reaching a specific age and/or some minimum requirements or to continue working to obtain higher pension benefits, private schemes typically have many more degrees of freedom, such as whether to participate and how much to contribute; how to allocate the pension wealth and how to change the investment decisions as retirement approaches; when to retire (within the margins of flexibility allowed by the regulations); and whether and how to annuitize (i.e. with an increasing or stable pension, in real terms; with or without supplementary benefits, such as a survivors’ pension).
The prevalence – at least in Europe, after the “reform season” of the 1990s and 2000s – of Defined Contribution (DC)-type pension formulae in both private and public systems implies greater risks for the individual relative to the (once more common) Defined Benefit (DB) formulae. While the latter typically embodies guarantees (e.g. in terms of a given replacement ratio Footnote 6 ), the former entails a higher level of individual responsibility.Footnote 7
In the Pay-as-You-Go (Pay-Go) scheme, workers’ contributions are used, period by period, to pay for the current pensions in an “intergenerational compact,” where the state is supposed to represent the interests of future generations. Adopting a defined contribution formula makes it possible to link pensions to individual workers’ contributions.
In funded schemes, contributions are instead invested in the financial markets and, together with returns, determine the capitalized value to be transformed, by choice or by statutory rules into a pension flow at retirement. Moreover, while the Pay-Go is necessarily a collective scheme, funded schemes can be provided on a collective basis (e.g. occupational plans) or as an individual pension account. In any case, while personal responsibility for financial security in retirement has increased, the pension landscape has become more uncertain due to financial crises, repeated recessions, elsa, and welfare reforms. Box 1 provides a taxonomy of basic pension concepts.
On a personal level, it is important that people be informed of and (basically) understand the following:
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A pension income (an annuity) protects against longevity risk, that is the risk of outliving one’s resources.
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The amount of contributions/payroll taxes paid into the pension account each period.
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The accrued capital (either financial, in case of a funded scheme, or notional, in the case of Pay-Go) at given ages and at retirement, that is, the amount of pension wealth.
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How this wealth is transformed into a pension income (annuity) and whether this transformation reflects (cohort-averaged) expected longevity at retirement.
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Retirement ages (early and normal) and how the pension benefit changes in case of deferral.
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How the pension benefit will evolve in retirement (indexation rules).
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What supplementary benefits – such as survivors – are included in pensions
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Whether it is possible to withdraw from the accumulated capital before retirement and whether/how paying back is envisaged to avoid benefit depletion.
About the pension system, citizens should be informed and have a basic understanding of the following:
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Governments have good reasons to be involved in pension regulations as the market’s ability to protect people in old age is limited and relying on just the market risks causing poverty among the older population.
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In a multi-pillar system, the main pillar is typically written into law and managed by the state. Other pension incomes come from occupational pension funds and individual accounts, which are dependent on the market but subject to regulatory bodies.
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This combination of public and private pension schemes diversifies the pension income sources and reduces the risk of inadequate retirement resources.
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The government pillar typically is financed on a Pay-Go basis that sets up an intergenerational contract: the working population pays contributions (payroll taxes), which are used to pay pensions to the retired population in the form of annuities.
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Unlike private insurance programs, the PAYG system does not rely on financial reserves, but on the understanding that the contract will be maintained in the future.
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The PAYG system’s sustainability is granted by pegging future pensions to a formula based on the entire flow of individual contributions, the age of retirement, and the growth rate of labor income.
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Public pensions also promote social solidarity, so that those who are disadvantaged in the labor market do not struggle in retirement. Solidarity can take the form of early retirement without penalization and/or of tax-financed contributions directed to workers in hazardous jobs, unemployed, or providing long-term cares to close relatives.
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The main challenge confronting Pay-Go systems is the need to adapt to major structural demographic and economic shifts. As populations age, fertility rates decrease, and migration flows stall, the intergenerational contract becomes difficult to maintain.
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In good reform, the pension system cannot be separated from the labor market and the economy. Economic growth and inclusive labor markets that make it easier for workers to find a job and for employers to hire are the best prerequisite for adequate pension systems.
All these concepts are not easily conveyed, and being informed about them is complex; information – when unofficially provided – can be partial, opaque, and biased, thus contributing to erroneous attitudes or decisions. Nevertheless, awareness, including having both correct information and basic understanding, is essential to help individuals make better personal plans and decisions and, as citizens, to induce politicians to enhance the transparency, efficiency, and fairness of the public system (Fornero et al., Reference Fornero, Oggero and Puglisi2019).
When retirement arrives, education and experience – which, also in financial matters, increases with age, somewhat compensating for the decrease in learning capacity (Salthouse, Reference Salthouse2005; Lusardi and Mitchell, Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2007), – should have done their part in providing the knowledge needed to manage accumulated wealth. U.S. survey data, however, show that older individuals perform only moderately better than their younger counterparts (Lusardi and Mitchell, Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2014; Lusardi et al., Reference Lusardi, Mitchell, Oggero and Mitchell2020b), which can explain, for example, why some people arrive close to retirement with very little or no wealth (Lusardi and Mitchell, Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2007). Agarwal et al. (Reference Agarwal, Driscoll, Gabaix and Laibson2009) documented an inverse U-shaped relation between age and the quality of decision-making: for example, compared to middle-aged individuals, older individuals borrow at higher interest rates and pay higher credit card fees. Indeed, financial illiteracy is a predictor of debt at older ages.
Typically, individuals with insufficient financial knowledge arrive unprepared at retirement. Using Health and Retirement Study data, Mastrobuoni (Reference Mastrobuoni2011) analyzed the introduction of the annual Social Security Statement in 1995 in the US and found that, after receiving it, workers were more likely to be able to provide a more accurate benefit estimate, but the additional information did not have significant effects on their retirement behavior.
It has also been shown that in the US, those who are more financially knowledgeable are more likely to participate in saving plans, to contribute at a higher rate, and to invest more in equity (Clark et al., Reference Clark, Lusardi and Mitchell2017). Importantly, Lusardi et al. (Reference Lusardi, Michaud and Mitchell2017), in a calibrated life cycle model with endogenous financial knowledge accumulation, estimated that 30–40% of wealth inequality at retirement is explained by financial knowledge.
In European countries, the situation is different because (a) the public pillar is more important and its transparency has increased over the last decades, also due to better official communications and learning material offered to workers, in the wake of the famous “Orange envelope” provided by the Swedish Pensions Agency, and (b) the need for pension reforms has alerted citizens to the fundamentals of pension economics. Despite this positive evolution, misunderstanding and misconceptions are still present and widespread, particularly in some Mediterranean countries, contributing, for example, to opposition to increases in the retirement age and/or restrictive changes in pension formulae, as well as in the indexation mechanism, even when pension systems exhibit imbalances. On the positive side, it has been shown for Italy, for instance, that more financially literate individuals are more likely to participate in a funded supplementary pension plan, thus integrating their (meanwhile reduced) social security benefits (Fornero and Monticone, Reference Fornero and Monticone2011). Similarly, in a more recent paper, Debets et al. (Reference Debets, Prast, Rossi and van Soest2022), using Dutch longitudinal data, analyzed the causal links between communication, pension knowledge, and pension decision-making and found pension knowledge to have a positive causal effect on pension decision-making.
It is thus clear that to avoid an unexpected consumption drop at retirement or to work much longer than planned will increasingly depend – for any given environment – on individuals’ ability to understand the workings of the pension system and to plan ahead. This ability can be built through targeted financial education programs, for example financial education programs in the workplace. Together with public authorities, employers and trade unions (Bernheim and Garrett, Reference Bernheim and Garrett2003; Clark et al., Reference Clark, D’Ambrosio, McDermed and Sawant2006; Goda et al., Reference Goda, Manchester and Sojourner2014), as well as consumer and civic associations, can all help and/or work together by providing specific courses, retirement planning materials, and hypothetical pension projections to encourage saving and participation in supplementary pension plan. But, as we will show in section 2, pension literacy is also very important to sustain a well-designed public pillar.
2.3. Reducing gender gaps and achieving women’s economic independence
Financial literacy is especially important for women’s retirement, because they live longer, may have interrupted working careers because of childbearing and an unequal distribution of caring responsibilities in the family, and tend to earn less than men. However, one strong finding of the empirical literature is that women – of all ages and in almost all countries – are less financially literate than men (Klapper and Lusardi, Reference Klapper and Lusardi2020). This gap persists even after accounting for different psychological gender traits, such as women’ documented greater risk aversion (Jianakoplos and Bernasek, Reference Jianakoplos and Bernasek2008) and lower self-confidence, which typically lead women to choose less risky portfolio choices with lower returns. When asked questions meant to measure basic financial literacy concepts, women are less likely than men to answer correctly and more likely to indicate that they do not know the answers (Lusardi and Mitchell, Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2014). “Don’t know” responses could reflect genuine ignorance or just reveal a lack of self-confidence. For example, a survey experiment conducted by Bucher-Koenen et al. (Reference Bucher-Koenen, Alessie, Lusardi and van Rooij2021) estimated that one-third of the gender gap in financial literacy can be explained by women’s lower self-confidence. In turn, this contributes to lower levels of participation in the stock markets. Other papers have shown that women’s lower financial literacy has an effect on their decision-making (for an overview, see Lusardi and Mitchell, Reference Lusardi and Mitchell2014).
Research on the pervasive gender gap in financial knowledge has pointed to several, possibly complementary explanations, many having roots in social habits and stereotypes, such as differences in educational paths and, later, in skills and opportunities. For example, differences between genders can start at the beginning of life, with an emphasis on “masculine” language, entertainment, and toys for boys, and “feminine” versions for girls; different incentives toward different school subjects (with more mathematics, sciences, and financial education for boys and more arts and literature for girls); and subtle linguistic biases that tend to create familiarity with – or, conversely, disinterest in – issues such as earning money, saving, managing risk, budgeting, and the like (Boggio et al., Reference Boggio, Fornero, Prast and Sandres2018).
One way to summarize this state of affairs is to recognize that, even in advanced economies, the social value generally attributed (of course, with important differences) to women’s economic/financial independence is still relatively low, compared to that of men. Not surprisingly, to support women’s rights and gender equality, the United Nations (UN) strongly advocates for women’s economic empowerment.Footnote 8 Closing the gender gap requires not only developing an appropriate set of policies – such as prohibiting de facto discriminatory practices, the legal imposition of women’s quotas, and incentives aimed at eradicating the still pervasive belief that men should play a predominant role in society – but also granting women more equal education rights and opportunities. These must include a special commitment to financial education to filling the gender gap and pursuing economic independence. Many projects with these objectives have been developed and implemented, and much progress has been achieved in the last decade, starting from a situation in which policy awareness of the importance of the gap was judged by an OECD investigation to be quite low (Hung et al., Reference Hung, Yoong and Brown2012).Footnote 9
From a life cycle perspective, the benefits of financial education compound over time (as do the costs of illiteracy). Consequently, it is not surprising that the disadvantages/discrimination in educational paths, labor market participation, career progression (the so-called glass ceiling), and lower earnings translate into disadvantages in pension accruals and entitlements for women (Lis and Bonthuis, Reference Lis and Bonthuis2019). Subtler disparities are also generated by pension rules concerning eligibility conditions, retirement ages, and the specific formulae for calculating benefits (OECD, 2021; Fornero, Reference Fornero2021). Sometimes these rules explicitly and paternalistically favor women, with the aim of providing (partial) ex post-compensation for ex-ante discrimination, as in the case of lower retirement ages, a “generosity” not necessarily in their financial interest, as it backfires at the pension level both directly, through lower accrued pension wealth and higher retirement spans, and indirectly, through less efforts in career advancement, both resulting in lower pay and lower benefits. Sometimes, the aim is not compensation but an explicit incentive for women to perform family chores and care activities and to substitute for deficient public services.Footnote 10 Lack of information/awareness is also responsible for women accepting moonlighting jobs, which do not contribute to their pension, or for economically disadvantaged choices, that have negative consequences on women’s retirement security (Angelici et al., Reference Angelici, Del Boca, Oggero, Profeta, Rossi and Villosio2022).
Although the general education female gap has disappeared in many countries (or has even changed into a male gap), financial education still exhibits a gap. Appropriate policy measures, financial education programs, and a good design are needed to level the playing field. Adding to the current situation are the consequences of the COVID-19 crisis, with the related occupational, income, and pension costs, especially for women. Much work still needs to be done to move forward.
3. Financial education for informed public decisions
The behavior of voters, policymakers, and bureaucrats and the design of electoral systems and rules are the subjects of study of both political science and economics. Public choice, at the intersection between the two disciplines, according to the New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, “uses economic tools to deal with traditional problems of political science. Its findings revolve around the effects of voter ignorance, agenda control, and the incentives facing bureaucrats in sacrificing the public interest to special interests” (Tullock, Reference Tullock2008).
The effectiveness of individual and collective decisions depends on both electoral participation and how informed personal and social choices are. More educated people are more likely to vote (Persson, Reference Persson2015) and support democratic regimes (Glaser et al., Reference Glaser, Ponzetto and Shleifer2007). This section of the paper discusses the link between financial education and better public decisions. As it is important to accumulate civic skills at school, to develop an understanding of society and personal rights and to act responsibly in the political sphere, some knowledge of economics and finance helps develop at least a basic understanding of the reasons behind public intervention and of the pros and cons of policy proposals and agendas. Economics teaches that markets are powerful instruments for allocating resources – natural resources, capital (real and financial), and labor – and distributing income and wealth. It also teaches that governments can intervene when markets fail to provide an efficient allocationFootnote 11 or when society wants to avoid an excessively unequal distribution of income, incentivize good practices for both individuals and firms, and pursue social justice.
3.1. Influence on policymaking and voting behavior
To our knowledge, the first work to argue that financial literacy could help people better comprehend public policies is the study of Fornero and Lo Prete (Reference Fornero and Lo Prete2019) on the electoral cost of enacting a major pension reform.
Reforms that require sacrifices for the population are difficult to implement, because policymakers know that the burden they impose on citizens makes the government unpopular and reduces the chances of re-election. The authors test whether financially literate citizens are less likely to punish governments that implement entitlement-reducing policies, such as an increase in retirement age or the adoption of a less generous pension formula. As shown in Section 2.2, pension reforms intended to reinforce the system’s sustainability are not easy to understand, particularly when propaganda from interest groups crowds out more unbiased information.
Fornero and Lo Prete (Reference Fornero and Lo Prete2019) consider the electoral outcomes of 118 legislative elections held between 1990 and 2010 in 21 advanced countries. The results indicate that the electoral cost of reforms, defined as a lower probability of the head of the government being re-elected in the aftermath of the enactment of a pension reform, is lower in countries whose population has a higher average level of financial literacy. Table 1 reports estimates from the baseline specification: with macroeconomic, demographic, and political conditions being equal, financial literacy (FL) affects the probability of re-election, which is 51 percentage points lower in the country with the lowest level of financial literacy in the sample, 15 percentage points higher for an average level of financial literacy in the sample, and 84 percentage points higher in the country with the highest level of financial literacy in the sample. These numbers, from linear probability models, show the sizeable effect of financial education in reducing the unpopularity of extensive pension reforms.
Notes: Robust standard errors are in parentheses. All the specifications include control variables for macroeconomic, demographic, and political conditions, and a constant, which is not reported. Ordinary least squares (OLS) estimates are given in columns (1) to (4), least-squares dummy variable (LSDV) estimates in columns (5) and (6), and probit average marginal effects in column (7). *, **, and *** denote significance at the 10%, 5%, and 1% levels, respectively.
Source: Fornero and Lo Prete (Reference Fornero and Lo Prete2019, summary of Table 1, page 14).
The implications of these findings go beyond structural pension reforms, which are an example of policies necessary to redress the intergenerational imbalance of pension promises and to restore the sustainability of the pension debt implicit in the pay-go system (see Section 2.2). Public policies can be the expression of specific interest groups or political stances, and parties can act strategically and propose candidates that are appealing to the masses but are incompetent, leading to worse policy outcomes after elections with higher participation (Lo Prete and Revelli, Reference Lo Prete and Revelli2017, Reference Lo Prete and Revelli2021). Or they can use fiscal policy to win elections, taking advantage, for example, of voters’ failure to estimate the (net) cost of a tax reduction (in terms of higher debt and/or the lower provision of public goods and services), the so-called fiscal illusion. Financial education provides citizens with a set of tools to independentlyFootnote 12 process information about the pros and cons of policy measures and reform proposals. Indeed, the scope for manipulation is smaller when voters have more cognitive skills, as measured by financial literacy, to process information about fiscal policy proposals (Murtinu et al., Reference Murtinu, Piccirilli and Sacchi2022).
A related determinant of the effectiveness of individual and collective decisions, along with how informed personal and social choices are, is, of course, electoral participation, often viewed as a desirable feature of democracies. Low turnout, which often occurs among the less educated and socioeconomically more fragile groups, can lead to the misrepresentation of preferences, if there are systematic differences across segments of the electorate (Lijphart, Reference Lijphart2001).
Education itself is also a determinant of citizens’ willingness to vote. Studies have shown that more educated people are more likely to vote (Persson, Reference Persson2015) and to support democratic regimes in which larger numbers of citizens can be an active part of decision-making (Glaser et al., Reference Glaser, Ponzetto and Shleifer2007). However, an empirical paradox in political science (Tenn, Reference Tenn2007) – and a subject not directly explored in economicsFootnote 13 – is that voter turnout, that is, the percentage of eligible voters who actually vote, is not higher in countries where the average level of general education is higher. As suggested by Delli Carpini (Reference Delli Carpini1997), the reasons for this evidence could be a decreased sense of belonging to a community that shares common values, the decreasing quality of education content, or the increasing complexity of politics, as shown earlier.
Recent and ongoing research has explored whether different levels and kinds of education are related to people’s participation in parliamentary elections across countries (Lo Prete, Reference Lo Prete2021). Figure 1 illustrates the simple relation between average levels of financial literacy and voter turnout at national elections. Over the period 1990–2014, the average level of voter turnout (on the vertical axis) is positively associated with the percentage of financially literate people (on the horizontal axis).
Empirical models controlling for a large set of determinants of voter turnout indicate that financial literacy continues to have a positive and causal impact on electoral participation. The results from Lo Prete (Reference Lo Prete2021), which also consider the association between school education at different grades and electoral participation, show that there is arguably more than civic skills and responsibility – taught at school – that matters to political engagement, such as the skills, measured by indicators of financial literacy, needed to gauge the basic content of economic policies.
3.2. Financial education and the macroeconomy
Mastering the basic concepts of economics and finance has become, as the previously reviewed studies suggest, a building block for effective participation not only in financial markets, as individuals, but also as knowledgeable citizens engaged in more prosperous and more inclusive societies. The progressivity of the tax system, the financing of the welfare state, and the use of natural resources can modify the distribution of resources and imply different pros and cons. Even the balance between markets and government intervention is the outcome of a collective decision process, and it is important to rely on financial knowledge to realize that the trade-off between more or less private markets’ freedom depends not only on efficiency considerations but also on society’s preferences toward equity and distribution.
The field is open to new research, both theoreticalFootnote 14 and empirical, testing the link between citizenship, financial education, and policy outcomes at the macroeconomic level. Some groundwork has already been done, from which we can build. The OECD was one of the first international organizations to recognize the importance of financial education and developed policies and programs in the early 2000s. Financial literacy has been included in the OECD PISA assessment of 15-year-old students since 2012. As mentioned in Section 2, student performance in financial literacy was assessed for a subsample of 18 countries and economies participating in the survey in 2012, 15 in 2015, and 20 in 2018 (OECD, 2020). The importance of financial literacy has become universal, and there are surveys that cover all countries in the world. For example, the Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services Global Financial Literacy Survey provides information on financial literacy in 2014 across a sample of more than 140 countries. Specifically, it reports percentage of people who are financially literate in a country, providing information on the percentage of correct answers in each domain of financial literacy (numeracy, interest compounding, inflation, risk diversification).Footnote 15 The International Institute for Management Development (IMD) World Competitiveness Yearbook has collected indicators of economic literacy and education in finance based on interviews with senior representatives of national business communities. These data were the first aggregate indicators available for panel analyses. Covering up to 55 countries, economic literacy was measured since 1995 and education in finance since 1998. The IMD World Competitiveness Center stopped collecting data on financial education in 2008, limiting the use of the indicators thereafter.Footnote 16 That is unfortunate. Macroeconomic analyses would significantly benefit from having internationally comparable financial education indicators over large country samples and a relatively long (and updated) period of time.
Financial literacy has long been adopted as an important social goal by international institutions, such as the OECD, the G20, the World Bank, and, recently, the United Nations in its 2022 Transforming Education Summit. Governments all over the world have moved in the same direction: they have set up national strategies and road maps aiming at increasing the financial knowledge and financial well-being of their citizens, focusing upon the more fragile and less fortunate segments of society.
The importance of financial literacy can also be linked to the macroeconomy, and to financial development and inclusion. As individual exposure to financial risks has increased in past decades – due to growing personal financial responsibilities, greater sophistication of financial/insurance markets, the spread of digital technologies (Fin Tech and Big Tech), financial market deregulation, the retrenching of public welfare programs – the costs of poor financial behavior can be substantial. More accessible financial markets, in principle, make capitalism potentially more inclusive, but there are also risks involved because of the growing complexity and intricacy of financial products and sometimes aggressive marketing (Jonker and Kosse, Reference Jonker and Kosse2020).
Financial education also helps to address the digital transition. The European Union has already acknowledged that education, in a general standard definition, is an important instrument to facilitate the creation of sustainable communities – that is, societies able to efficiently produce, allocate, and use their resources, targeting general prosperity based on environmental protection and social cohesion – and the digitalization of private and public products and services. Financial education should be explicitly included in these strategic goals, given the potential dangers for unsophisticated individuals who use digital payments. Indeed, in regression analyses accounting for individuals’ level of financial literacy, digital literacy was found to increase access to digital instruments, but was not associated with better personal finance (Lo Prete, Reference Lo Prete2022).Footnote 17
Given that financial literacy can inform public decisions and spur political participation, more research should explore the association between financial literacy and citizens’ engagement in politics and decision-making. Moreover, given the link between financial education and better citizenship – which would be interesting to explore with microeconomic data as well – there is greater scope for financial education to be introduced as a mandatory subject in school – as, for example, Portugal did in 2018 – and in specific learning programs for adults.
4. Conclusion
General awareness of the basic notions of finance and economics constitutes an essential element of general literacy in contemporary life. It improves both personal and collective decisions, with benefits in terms of financial well-being and inclusion, higher and more informed political participation, more effective economic policies, lower inequality, and a stronger macroeconomy. The research on the effects of financial literacy and financial education on individual decision-making is now rich and empirically quite strong. The extension to both macroeconomics and the political arena is more recent and still very much a work in progress. In our opinion, it is a very promising field of research. It will provide further support for financial education programs, both in school, for all students, and for adults as well, with targeted interventions for the most disadvantaged segments of our societies. It is also important to note that financial education should be gender-neutral, avoid linguistic biases, and teach essential notions of how the market economy and government work, in addition to basic financial concepts. Governments should introduce it in school curricula (possibly in parallel with civic education) and make sure it is offered to all students, and teachers are trained to teach it. Some countries have shown the way.