Most of us left school knowing how to calculate the area of a triangle. Very few of us left school knowing how superannuation compounding works, how to read a credit card statement, or what a reasonable emergency fund looks like.
That gap has consequences. Research from UNSW has found that people with limited financial knowledge are more susceptible to scams, predatory lending, and poor investment choices. And Australia still lacks a national financial capability action plan, while countries such as New Zealand, the United States, and the Nordic nations have moved to make financial education compulsory in schools. We are falling behind, and ordinary Australians are paying the price.
The skills that tend to matter most in real life are also the ones rarely taught: how to build a budget that reflects your life, how debt compounds against you over time, what your super is invested in and why it matters, how to distinguish a sound financial decision from a clever-sounding one, and how to have an honest conversation about money with the people you share your life with.
The good news is that self-education has never been more accessible. ASIC’s Moneysmart website offers free, genuinely useful tools covering everything from budgeting basics to retirement planning. The financial basics are not complicated once someone explains them plainly.
And when it comes to the next generation, the most powerful thing parents can do isn’t finding the perfect app or worksheet. It’s talking openly at home. Normalise conversations about budgets, trade-offs, and what things really cost. Research consistently shows that scenario-based, real-world learning is what builds lasting financial understanding in young people. Life provides plenty of scenarios. Use them.
Financial literacy isn’t a subject. It’s a life skill. And it’s never too late to learn it.