What Parents are Saying
- 56% of parents believe high
school graduates are totally unprepared to manage their personal finances
responsibly.
- Only 30% of parents said
their child's high school offered a course on practical money skills.
- 78% of parents said their
high school student does not have a budget.
- 57% of parents put no restrictions
on how their child can spend the money they are given.
- Over half of the parents
surveyed, 62%, require their teens to save at least some of what they
earn.
- Out of parents surveyed,
53% said their children generally spend the money they earn on food
and entertainment.
- Only 37% of parents said
their family will have an itemized back-to-school budget, 61% will not.
American Teenagers:
- As a cohort spent
over $172 billion in 2001, equal to Mexico’s yearly exports. (1)
- Average expenditures:
$104/ week; $5,408/year (1)
- Teens surveyed by
Teenage Research Unlimited reported spending 98% of their money, rather
than saving it. (1)
- Children’s spending
has roughly doubled every ten years for the past three decades, and
tripled in the 1990s. (23)
- More than 1 in 5
youths ages 12 to 19 have their own credit cards or have access to parents’
credit cards, and 14% have debit cards. (1)
- 40% of students
are likely to buy a pair of jeans (or something similar) they really
want even if they do not have the money to pay for it. 22% percent would
pay for it with a credit card. (2)
- One in three carry
credit cards, even more have an ATM card(4)
- High School graduates
stand to earn over $1 million in adulthood-without adjusting for inflation
(5)
- Nearly half of all
high school students nationwide have a part time job (16)
- Of the 4,000 students
who took the Jump$tart personal finance survey in 2002, 68.1% received
failing scores. (21)
- 50% of high school
graduates do not go to college and enter the workplace directly. (20)
- By 2004, people
from 16 to 22 will comprise the majority of online shoppers despite
the fact that they are ill-prepared to manage their money.
-
American Families:
- Outstanding non-secured consumer debt rose from $805 billion in 1990 to $1.65 trillion in
2001. (13)
- 40% of Americans
say they live beyond their means. (20)
- The personal
savings rate as a percentage of GDP decreased from 7.5% in the early
80’s to 2.4% in 2002 During World War II, Americans were saving more
than 24%. (12)
- The U.S. has the
lowest personal savings rate of any major industrialized nation. (35)
- The percentage of
income used for household debt (payments, including mortgages, credit
cards, and student loans) rose to the highest level in more than a decade
in 2001 and remained at 14% in 2002. (13)
- Approximately 10,000,000
Americans, the ‘unbanked,’ are not using mainstream, insured financial
institutions. (36)
- Nearly 5% of consumers
are late with their credit card payments. (14)
- 48% of credit card
owners only pay their minimum monthly payment each month. (30)
- Credit card spending
jumped 8.1% in the 1st half of 2002.
- Average U.S.
credit card debt per household is on the rise: from $2,985
in 1990 to $8,562 in 2002, with an average interest rate of 14.71%.
(15), (27)
- More than half of
American families are not saving enough to preserve their standard of
living in retirement.
- Between 1983 and
1998, 2/3rds of the defined benefit or traditional pension plans in
the US were terminated. (17)
- Half of all Americans
are living paycheck to paycheck. (19)
- Christmas 2001 was
the highest level of consumer debt in US history. (19)
- Median pre-tax household
income fell by more than $900 from $43,162 in 2000 to $42,228 in 2001.
Income dropped everywhere but the top. (19)
- More than half of
American workers between the ages of 45 and 54 did not have any kind
of retirement account in 1998. Data compiled in 2000 showed half of
those in the 55 to 64 age range had balances of less than $33,000. (22)
- 66% of Americans
don’t pay off their entire credit card bill each month. (25)
- 69% of Americans
plan to work in their retirement years. (28)
- Life expectancy
in the US recently reached a record high, with an average lifespan of
74.1 years for men and 79.5 years for women. (32)
- One in four women
currently retires on an income below the poverty level. (33)
- Over the next 40
years, the number of women over 85 is expected to at least triple, with
3/4ths of this population single, divorced, or widowed. (33)
- There are nearly
7,000 mutual funds to choose from. (29)
- The net worth of
the average middle-class American household after accounting for debt
is less than $10,000. (31)
- 50.8% of college-age
adults agree with this statement: “I have experienced repeated, unsuccessful
attempts to control, cut back or stop excessive money use.” (34)
- 64.8% of college-age
adults agree with this statement: I experience a mood change (high or
low) just before or after a shopping event. (34)
College Students:
- Persons entering
college are offered an average of 8 credit cards the first week of school.
- 55% of college students
acquire their first credit card during their first year of college,
and 83% of college students have at least one credit card. (11)
- 45% of college students
are in credit card debt, the average credit card debt being $3,066.
(11)
- Undergraduates students
carry an average of three credit cards (6).
- Graduating students
have an average of $20,402 in combined education loan and credit card
balances. (6)
- 20% of graduating
college students have $10,000 or more in non-school related credit card
debt. (26)
- An increased number
of college student borrowers feel more burdened by their education debt,
with about 25% of the borrowers perceiving themselves as having significant
problems (6)
- Students who came
from low-income families (defined as Pell Grant recipients) report feeling
more burdened by their debt than non-Pell recipients, when controlling
for all other factors. This is a change from previous studies when there
was no significant difference in attitudes between low-income and non-Pell
recipients. (6)
- 28% of students
with a credit card roll over debt each month (7)
- University administrators
state that they lose more students to credit card debt than to academic
failure (8)
- In 2001, the credit
industry issued more than 5 billion solicitations to consumers, including
college students. (18)
- Only 59% of college
graduates agree that the benefits of incurring student loans are worth
it overall. (6)
- Students double
their average credit card debt-and triple the number of credit cards
in their wallets-from the time they arrive on campus until graduation.
(6)
- College students
borrowed in the 90s what they borrowed in the 60s, 70s and 80s combined.
- Credit card companies
usually offer credit limits to college students between $500 and $3000,
with higher interest rates than nonstudents, between 18% and 20%. (25)
Bankruptcies, Defaults and
Forclosures:
- The US has recently
seen an over 50% increase in bankruptcies among people under age 25
(fastest growing age range for bankruptcies). Bankruptcy filings for
this age group were at an all time high in 2000, numbering almost 150,000,
which is a tenfold increase in just five years. (4)
- Non-business bankruptcy
filings increased again in 2002 totaling 1,539,111. (9)
- Non-business bankruptcy
filings accounted for the overwhelming majority (97.6%) of all bankruptcy
cases filed in calendar year 2002. (9)
- Home forclosures
in 2002 reached the highest rate in 30 years. (11)
- Mortgage delinquencies
have surged to their highest level since 1992.
- More young adults
filed for bankruptcy than graduated from college in 2001. (35)
-
Financial Literacy Education
- Only 21% of students
between the ages of 16 and 22 say they have taken a personal finance
course through school. (2)
- Only 26% of 13 to
21 year olds reported their parents actively taught them how to manage
money. (2)
- Only 7% of parents
say their child understands financial matters well (2)
- 94% of students
ages 16-22 say they are likely to turn to their parents as a financial
information source (2)
- 30% of youth report
that their parents rarely or never discuss saving and investing with
them. 47% say their parents rarely or never discuss household budgeting
with them (2).
- 61% of parents say
that parents and schools should share the responsibility for teaching
children about financial education (2).
- Research has shown
that as little as 10 hours of personal financial education positively
affects students spending and savings habits. (10)
- A Consumer Reports survey of 12-year-olds found that 28% didn’t know that credit cards
are a form of borrowing, 40% didn’t know that banks charge interest
on loans, 34% didn’t know that you can’t tell how good a product
is by how much it’s advertised. (24)
Adults & Parents:
- Nearly two-thirds
of American adults and students didn't know that in times of inflation
money loses its value. (2)
- Half of the adults
and almost two-thirds of the students didn't know that the stock market
provides a value for ordinary people to buy stock. (2)
- One quarter of American
adults confused "budget deficit" with "national debt".
(2)
- Only a quarter of
Americans feel very well informed about managing household finances.
(4)
- Among parents with
children five or older, only 26% feel well prepared to teach their kids
about basic personal finances. (4)
- 80% of parents believed
that schools provided classes on money management and budgeting. (8)
- The Financial Educational
Survey done by Capital One found that: (9)
- More than 70 percent
of parents say they have spoken with their teens about credit and using
credit cards wisely, while less than 44 percent of the teenaged children
of those respondents say their parents have talked to them about credit
cards.
- 54 percent of parents
rate their teenager's knowledge about managing money as "good"
or "excellent," while an overwhelming 78 percent of the teenaged
children of those respondents rated their knowledge as merely average
or even poor.
- A research commissioned
by Northwestern Mutual reveals the following: (11)
- 43% of parents believe
that schools should be doing more to teach kids about money.
- Almost half of all
parents say they don’t set a good example when it comes to handling
their own money and are not capable of properly teaching their children.
- 70% of parents say
that most kids in the US today feel a sense of entitlement- that they
just expect to have whatever it is they want whenever they want it.
- 57% of parents say
most kids do not understand the value of money.
- 41% of parents say
adults never learned how to manage money properly.
- 22% of parents think
most parents are incompetent or inadequate when it comes to teaching
their kids about money.
Students:
- The third annual
back-to-school survey from Capital One found that: (10)
- 87 percent of college
students and 90 percent of high school students rely on their parents
for financial guidance.
- 98 percent of college
students and 90 percent of high school students say they have learned
about money management through their own experiences with money. Additionally,
53 percent of collegians and 43 percent of high school students claim
to have learned something about money management through talking with
friends.
- 70 percent of college
students surveyed say their parents have not given them tips or advice
about spending wisely while shopping for school supplies.
- Capital One's survey
found more than 70 percent of middle school and high school students
say they perform odd jobs to earn extra money. Additionally 72 percent
of college students have a regular full or part-time job.
- 64% of consumers
ages 18 to 24 don't even know the interest rates they pay on their credit
cards. (13)
- In the Jump$tart
Coalition survey, 25.7% of the students without any bank account scored
lower (46.1%) than those who have a savings account (51.7%), a checking
account (50.5%), and both savings and checking accounts (50.2%). (28)
- In the Jump$tart
Coalition survey, only 26% of 13- to 21- year-olds reported that their
parents actively taught them how to manage money. (28)
Other:
- 98% of banks responding
to this year’s Consumer Bankers Association’s survey said they sponsor
financial literacy programs and/or support such efforts through partnerships.
(14)
- The number of states
with personal finance standards or guidelines drops from 40 states to
31 states from 2000 to 2002. (3)
- Only 4 states require
students to complete a course that includes personal finance before
graduating from high school in 2002. (3)
- In 2002, just 17
states that have personal finance standards require schools to implement
these standards. (3)
American Kids & Teenagers
- American children,
teens and young adults earned about $211 billion in 2003, down from
$231 billion in 2002. (22)
- In 2003, Teens spent
$175 billion, averaging $103 per week. (6)
- In 2003, 8-to-14-years-olds,
so-called “tweens”, spent $39 billion a year. (23)
- The average adolescent
spends about $264 a month. (24)
- 11 % of teens 12-19
have their own credit card, an additional 10% have access to a parent's
credit card. (5)
- 16% of teens 12-19
have their own ATM cards, and 21 % have their own checking accounts.
(5)
- Over one-third of
the 2002 students surveyed have an ATM card. (28)
- Nearly 75% of students
surveyed have a saving and/or checking account with a bank. (28)
- Children’s spending
has roughly doubled every 10 years for the past three decades and tripled
in the 1990s. Kids ages 4-12 spent 2.2 billion in 1968 and 4.2 billion
in 1984. By 1994 the figure increased to 17.1 billion, and by 2002 their
spending exceeded $40 billion. Kids’ direct buying power is expected
to exceed 51.8 billion by 2006. (25)
Undergraduate & Graduate
Students
- A 2001 Credit Card
Usage Analysis by Nellie Mae includes the following: (15)
- 83% of undergraduate
students have at least one credit card; a 24% increase since 1998.
- Average credit card
balance is $2,327; a 15% decrease from the 2000 average.
- Median credit card
balance is $1,770; a 43% increase above the median in 2000.
- 21% of undergraduates
who have cards, have high-level balances between $3,000 and $7,000;
a 61% increase over the 2000 population.
- Graduating students
have an average of $20,402 in combined education loan and credit card
balances.
- Students residing
in the Northeast use credit cards the least, while Midwesterners carry
the highest average credit card balances.
- Students double
their average credit card debt - and triple the number of credit cards
in their wallets - from the time they arrive on campus until graduation.
- Although freshmen
have the lowest rate of card possession among undergraduates, 54% carry
a credit card. The percentage of students with at least one card increases
to 92% in sophomore year.
- Only 23% of freshmen,
on the other hand, have a student loan.
- Average number of
credit cards per college student is 4.25. Forty-seven percent
of students with credit cards have at least four cards, up from 32%
in 2000 and 27% in 1998.
- 6% of college students
have more than $7,000 in credit card debt.
- Results of the 2002
National Student Loan survey by Nellie Mae include the following: (16)
- Over 70% of students
who borrow to pay for their higher education agree that student loans
were very or extremely important in allowing them access to education
after high school.
- 58% of students
said student loans were very or extremely important in allowing them
to attend the college of their choice; and, of the students who attended
graduate school, 72% said student loans were very or extremely important
in allowing them to pursue graduate studies.
- The average undergraduate
debt is $18,900 in 2002, up 66% from $11,400 since 1997.
- Those who attended
private four-year
colleges borrowed most (average $21,200/median $18,400), followed by
those who attended public four-year colleges (average $17,100/median
$16,200), next were those who attended vocational/technical school (average
$15,000/median $11,900), and those borrowing the least attended public
two-year institutions (average $8,700/median $7,700).
- Students attending
graduate school borrow, on average, an additional $31,700 beyond their
undergraduate borrowing, an increase of 51% since 1997. The median debt
level for graduate school borrowing is $23,700, an increase of 72% since
1997.
- In 2002, the average
monthly payment on undergraduate debt is $182, vs. $161 in 1997. This
13% increase in monthly payments is much lower than the 66% increase
in undergraduate education debt.
- In 2001, 4.7 million
students borrowed an average of $3,500 under the subsidized Stafford
Loan program, and 3.4 million (including some of the same students)
borrowed an average of $4,100 in unsubsidized Stafford Loans.
- 27% of the respondents
report having used credit cards to help finance their education. This
group had an average credit card balance of $3,400 when they finished
school.
- The typical (median)
borrower devotes about 8% of monthly income to debt repayment, and only
6% of income to repaying undergraduate loans. The mean payment-to-income
ratios of 11.6% for total debt and 9% for undergraduate debt are high
enough to cause many borrowers to feel burdened by their obligations.
- About 45% of college
students carry a credit debt of $3,066 on average. (21)
- 72 percent of college
students have a regular full or part-time job. (10)
- Almost half of college
students with credit cards have paid a fee for late payment, and 7%
have had a credit card canceled because of late payments. (26)
American Families
General:
- Over 40% of families
live off of 110% of their incomes. (27)
- Nearly six out of
10 Americans are racing to make changes in their financial situation
so they'll have enough income when they retire. (4)
- 85% of adults agree
that young adults today lack the basic skills to successfully manage
their finances, 49 percent say youth think they are more likely to become
millionaires by staring in a reality TV series than by learning how
to budget and save wisely and 75% of teens rely on their parents for
personal finance information. (18)
- 60% of American
adults are more likely to turn to family members for advice rather than
a financial professional. (12)
- A greater understanding
and familiarity with financial markets and institutions will lead to
increased economic activity and growth. (21)
Debt:
- The average credit
card balance for the age between 45 and 64 is $6,094. (30)
- If you are between
ages 45 and 64, chances are that you have twice as much debt as other
Americans, not in this age bracket. (30)
- The average citizen
is drowning in debt; and 75% of credit card holders have maxed out at
least one credit card during the past year. (31)
- The percentage of
income used for household debt payments, including mortgages, credit
cards, and student loans, rose to the highest level in more than a decade
in 2001 and remained above 13% in 2003. (21)
- It can takes decades
to pay off a $3,000 credit card balance if you pay only the minimum
each month. (13)
Saving & Investment:
- Only 20% of Americans
were very confident about making good investment decisions. (1)
- 23% of Americans
do not save anything at all on a monthly basis for long-term goals such
as retirement or a child’s education. (12)
- Personal savings
as a percentage of personal income decreased from 7.5% in the early
1980s to 2.3% in the first 3 quarters of 2003. (21)
- Between 25,000,000
and 56,000,000 adults are unbanked, i.e., not using mainstream, insured
financial institutions. (21)
- Americans on average
had socked away only $40,000 in retirement savings and 25% of those
surveyed had no retirement account at all. (20)
- More than half of
American workers between the ages of 45 and 54 did not have any kind
of retirement account in 1998. (32)
Bankruptcies, Defaults and
Foreclosures
- Nearly 500,000 people
over age 50 were forced to file for personal bankruptcy in 2002. (29)
- Personal Bankruptcies
were up 19% in 2002 over 2001. (2)
- The fastest growing
group declaring bankruptcy is young adults age 20 to 24. (26)
- Consumer bankruptcy
filings in 2003 hit a record of nearly 1.7 million, or an average of
nearly one in every seven households over the past decade. The bad debt
costs the average U.S. family more than $500 annually through higher
consumer prices. (7)
- In just 20 years,
from 1981-2001, the number of women filing petitions for bankruptcy
increased 662%. (19)
- If the trend of
increased bankruptcies continues, more than 5 million families with
children will file for bankruptcy by the end of this decade. (17)
- More people this
year will file for bankruptcy than will graduate from college. And more
Americans will file for bankruptcy than divorce. (17)
- Personal Bankruptcies
nearly doubled in the past decade. (21)
Students:
- The third annual
back-to-school survey from Capital One found that: (10)
- 87 percent of college
students and 90 percent of high school students rely on their parents
for financial guidance.
- 98 percent of college
students and 90 percent of high school students say they have learned
about money management through their own experiences with money. Additionally,
53 percent of collegians and 43 percent of high school students claim
to have learned something about money management through talking with
friends.
- 70 percent of college
students surveyed say their parents have not given them tips or advice
about spending wisely while shopping for school supplies.
- Capital One's survey
found more than 70 percent of middle school and high school students
say they perform odd jobs to earn extra money. Additionally 72 percent
of college students have a regular full or part-time job.
- 64% of consumers
ages 18 to 24 don't even know the interest rates they pay on their credit
cards. (13)
- In the Jump$tart
Coalition survey, 25.7% of the students without any bank account scored
lower (46.1%) than those who have a savings account (51.7%), a checking
account (50.5%), and both savings and checking accounts (50.2%). (28)
- In the Jump$tart
Coalition survey, only 26% of 13- to 21- year-olds reported that their
parents actively taught them how to manage money. (28)
Other:
- 98% of banks responding
to this year’s Consumer Bankers Association’s survey said they sponsor
financial literacy programs and/or support such efforts through partnerships.
(14)
- The number of states
with personal finance standards or guidelines drops from 40 states to
31 states from 2000 to 2002. (3)
- Only 4 states require
students to complete a course that includes personal finance before
graduating from high school in 2002. (3)
- In 2002, just 17
states that have personal finance standards require schools to implement
these standards. (3)
American Kids & Teenagers
- American children,
teens and young adults earned about $211 billion in 2003, down from
$231 billion in 2002. (22)
- In 2003, Teens spent
$175 billion, averaging $103 per week. (6)
- In 2003, 8-to-14-years-olds,
so-called “tweens”, spent $39 billion a year. (23)
- The average adolescent
spends about $264 a month. (24)
- 11 % of teens 12-19
have their own credit card, an additional 10% have access to a parent's
credit card. (5)
- 16% of teens 12-19
have their own ATM cards, and 21 % have their own checking accounts.
(5)
- Over one-third of
the 2002 students surveyed have an ATM card. (28)
- Nearly 75% of students
surveyed have a saving and/or checking account with a bank. (28)
- Children’s spending
has roughly doubled every 10 years for the past three decades and tripled
in the 1990s. Kids ages 4-12 spent 2.2 billion in 1968 and 4.2 billion
in 1984. By 1994 the figure increased to 17.1 billion, and by 2002 their
spending exceeded $40 billion. Kids’ direct buying power is expected
to exceed 51.8 billion by 2006. (25)
Undergraduate & Graduate
Students
- A 2001 Credit Card
Usage Analysis by Nellie Mae includes the following: (15)
- 83% of undergraduate
students have at least one credit card; a 24% increase since 1998.
- Average credit card
balance is $2,327; a 15% decrease from the 2000 average.
- Median credit card
balance is $1,770; a 43% increase above the median in 2000.
- 21% of undergraduates
who have cards, have high-level balances between $3,000 and $7,000;
a 61% increase over the 2000 population.
- Graduating students
have an average of $20,402 in combined education loan and credit card
balances.
- Students residing
in the Northeast use credit cards the least, while Midwesterners carry
the highest average credit card balances.
- Students double
their average credit card debt - and triple the number of credit cards
in their wallets - from the time they arrive on campus until graduation.
- Although freshmen
have the lowest rate of card possession among undergraduates, 54% carry
a credit card. The percentage of students with at least one card increases
to 92% in sophomore year.
- Only 23% of freshmen,
on the other hand, have a student loan.
- Average number of
credit cards per college student is 4.25. Forty-seven percent
of students with credit cards have at least four cards, up from 32%
in 2000 and 27% in 1998.
- 6% of college students
have more than $7,000 in credit card debt.
- Results of the 2002
National Student Loan survey by Nellie Mae include the following: (16)
- Over 70% of students
who borrow to pay for their higher education agree that student loans
were very or extremely important in allowing them access to education
after high school.
- 58% of students
said student loans were very or extremely important in allowing them
to attend the college of their choice; and, of the students who attended
graduate school, 72% said student loans were very or extremely important
in allowing them to pursue graduate studies.
- The average undergraduate
debt is $18,900 in 2002, up 66% from $11,400 since 1997.
- Those who attended
private four-year
colleges borrowed most (average $21,200/median $18,400), followed by
those who attended public four-year colleges (average $17,100/median
$16,200), next were those who attended vocational/technical school (average
$15,000/median $11,900), and those borrowing the least attended public
two-year institutions (average $8,700/median $7,700).
- Students attending
graduate school borrow, on average, an additional $31,700 beyond their
undergraduate borrowing, an increase of 51% since 1997. The median debt
level for graduate school borrowing is $23,700, an increase of 72% since
1997.
- In 2002, the average
monthly payment on undergraduate debt is $182, vs. $161 in 1997. This
13% increase in monthly payments is much lower than the 66% increase
in undergraduate education debt.
- In 2001, 4.7 million
students borrowed an average of $3,500 under the subsidized Stafford
Loan program, and 3.4 million (including some of the same students)
borrowed an average of $4,100 in unsubsidized Stafford Loans.
- 27% of the respondents
report having used credit cards to help finance their education. This
group had an average credit card balance of $3,400 when they finished
school.
- The typical (median)
borrower devotes about 8% of monthly income to debt repayment, and only
6% of income to repaying undergraduate loans. The mean payment-to-income
ratios of 11.6% for total debt and 9% for undergraduate debt are high
enough to cause many borrowers to feel burdened by their obligations.
- About 45% of college
students carry a credit debt of $3,066 on average. (21)
- 72 percent of college
students have a regular full or part-time job. (10)
- Almost half of college
students with credit cards have paid a fee for late payment, and 7%
have had a credit card canceled because of late payments. (26)
American Families
General:
- Over 40% of families
live off of 110% of their incomes. (27)
- Nearly six out of
10 Americans are racing to make changes in their financial situation
so they'll have enough income when they retire. (4)
- 85% of adults agree
that young adults today lack the basic skills to successfully manage
their finances, 49 percent say youth think they are more likely to become
millionaires by staring in a reality TV series than by learning how
to budget and save wisely and 75% of teens rely on their parents for
personal finance information. (18)
- 60% of American
adults are more likely to turn to family members for advice rather than
a financial professional. (12)
- A greater understanding
and familiarity with financial markets and institutions will lead to
increased economic activity and growth. (21)
Debt:
- The average credit
card balance for the age between 45 and 64 is $6,094. (30)
- If you are between
ages 45 and 64, chances are that you have twice as much debt as other
Americans, not in this age bracket. (30)
- The average citizen
is drowning in debt; and 75% of credit card holders have maxed out at
least one credit card during the past year. (31)
- The percentage of
income used for household debt payments, including mortgages, credit
cards, and student loans, rose to the highest level in more than a decade
in 2001 and remained above 13% in 2003. (21)
- It can takes decades
to pay off a $3,000 credit card balance if you pay only the minimum
each month. (13)
Saving & Investment:
- Only 20% of Americans
were very confident about making good investment decisions. (1)
- 23% of Americans
do not save anything at all on a monthly basis for long-term goals such
as retirement or a child’s education. (12)
- Personal savings
as a percentage of personal income decreased from 7.5% in the early
1980s to 2.3% in the first 3 quarters of 2003. (21)
- Between 25,000,000
and 56,000,000 adults are unbanked, i.e., not using mainstream, insured
financial institutions. (21)
- Americans on average
had socked away only $40,000 in retirement savings and 25% of those
surveyed had no retirement account at all. (20)
- More than half of
American workers between the ages of 45 and 54 did not have any kind
of retirement account in 1998. (32)
Bankruptcies, Defaults and
Foreclosures
- Nearly 500,000 people
over age 50 were forced to file for personal bankruptcy in 2002. (29)
- Personal Bankruptcies
were up 19% in 2002 over 2001. (2)
- The fastest growing
group declaring bankruptcy is young adults age 20 to 24. (26)
- Consumer bankruptcy
filings in 2003 hit a record of nearly 1.7 million, or an average of
nearly one in every seven households over the past decade. The bad debt
costs the average U.S. family more than $500 annually through higher
consumer prices. (7)
- In just 20 years,
from 1981-2001, the number of women filing petitions for bankruptcy
increased 662%. (19)
- If the trend of
increased bankruptcies continues, more than 5 million families with
children will file for bankruptcy by the end of this decade. (17)
- More people this
year will file for bankruptcy than will graduate from college. And more
Americans will file for bankruptcy than divorce. (17)
- Personal Bankruptcies
nearly doubled in the past decade. (21)
-
SOURCES:
- Teenage Research
Unlimited, 2001.
- Youth and Money
Survey, ASEC,1999 and/or 2001.
- National Longitudinal
Survey of Youth
- Louisiana State
University Agricultural Center
- NEFE, 2001
- Nellie Mae, 2002
- Nellie Mae, 2000
- Utah Mentor, 2003:
The Voice Digital News, 2003
- American Bankruptcy
Institute, 2003
- NEFE, 1998
- Senate Resolution
48, 2003.
- Bureau of Economic
Analysis (NIPA), 2003.
- Federal Reserve,
2003.
- The Nilson Report
- CardWeb.com
- Financial Literacy
2010
- EBRI, 2002.
- Consumer Federation
of America
- John Bryant, Silver
Rights Movement.
- Fort Worth Business
Press 2002.
- Jump$tart Coalition,
2002.
- Lakeland Ledger,
2002.
- Northern Virginia
Parent, 2003.
- Consumer Reports
- Centre Daily Times,
2002.
- Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, 2003.
- NFCC 2002.
- AARP 2002.
- Moneycentral.com,
2002.
- VISA 2000.
- Consumercredit.com,
2002.
- US Dep’t. of
Health and Human Services, 2002.
- Investing for Women,
2002.
- MyVesta 2002,
- ABA Education Foundation
- Bureau of National
Affairs
- Boston Research
Group
- NCEE
- NCEE, April 2003,
Survey of The States, P14
- FleetBoston
- Teenage Research
Unlimited (TRU)
- Teenage Research
Unlimited (TRU), Jan 9, 2004, www.teenresearch.com/PRview.cfm?edit_id=168
- National Retailers
Federation, Jan 28, 2004, Retailers: Attach Bankruptcy Reform to Ag
Bill, http://www.nrf.com/content/default.asp?folder=press/release2004&file=bankruptcyag0104.htm&bhcp=1
- George Chamberlin,
Oct 15, 2003, “Kids need to learn about money, too”, North Country
Times
- Capital One and
Consumer Action, Oct 23, 2003, Financial Educational Survey, http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=70667&p=irol-newsArticle2&ID=462192&highlight=parents
- Capital One, July
29, 2003, Third Annual Back-to School Survey, http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=70667&p=irol-newsArticle2&ID=436171&highlight=parents
- Northwestern Mutual,
October 2003, “Teaching Kids About Money” Parent Survey Summary
- Northwestern Mutual,
2000, “Money Maladies”, http://www.northwesternmutual.com/corporate/contentassets/pdfs/money_maladies.pdf
- My Vesta Organization
- Consumer Bankers
Association (CBA), April 14, 2003, CBA's 2003 Financial Literacy Survey, http://www.cbanet.org/news/Press%20Releases/Financial_literacy/2003_financial_literacy_release.htm
- Nellie
Mae, April 2002, Undergraduate Students and Credit Cards, P1, 2, http://www.nelliemae.com/library/ccstudy_2001.pdf
- Nellie Mae, February
6, 2003, College on Credit: How Borrowers Perceive their Education Debt,
Page v, vi, 1, 29, http://www.nelliemae.com/library/nasls_2002.pdf
- Natalie Ghidotti,
Feb 2004, “In too deep”, Little Rock Family, P9
- Visa USA
- Harvard University,
2001, 2001 Consumer Bankruptcy Project
- Merrill Lynch,
August 2003, Retirement Preparedness Survey
- Senator Akaka
- Harris Interactive
- MarketResearch.com
- Coinstar Inc
- Packaged Facts,
2002, The U.S. Kids Market”
- Alejandro Cabezut,
Jan 25, 2004, Laredo Morning Times
- Observer, Jan 12,
2004
- Dr. Lewis Mandell
- Steven N. Taieb,
Esq., Bottom Line-Personal, Nov 1, 2003
- Steven N. Taieb,
Esq., Bottom Line-Personal, Nov 1, 2003
- Summit Daily News,
Oct 23 2003
- Stanley H. Breitbard,
Journal of accountancy, Dec 2003
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