Andrew Grant;152724 wrote:Schools shouldn't teach this, as then we'll have loads of pansys blaming schools when they get in debt. Besides, this is a matter for the family and they should deal with their children how they see fit, one size does not fit all.
The pansys already do blame schools for not teaching it.
It should be taught in the home, but with levels of financial literacy very low generally, it would then be down to luck - those that have financially literate parents excel financially, whilst the majority get left behind.
When I was at school in the late 90s and early 2000s, we were taught about nutrition and how to cook a proper meal. Sadly I don’t think this is as common now. I see it at as a similar principle with personal finance. As a proper understanding of nutrition should reduce the burden on the public funded health service, so too should a proper understanding of personal finance reduce dependence on the welfare state. Better to offer a hand up early on, than a more expensive hand out later in life IMO.