What experience do young people have with practical money skills?
Practical money skills are essential for young people to learn how to use credit and debit cards effectively, to start a savings habit and to think about investing and saving into a pension.
Yet over a quarter of 16–25-year-olds do not even have a debit card and are therefore not learning how to manage their own finances. That said over three quarters reported a regular saving habit and a third topped up savings accounts regularly.
While perhaps unsurprisingly those between 21 and 25 were more likely to have wider experience of money matters and more likely to have financial products such as a credit card or a savings account, ensuring young people understand financial concepts and can manage their money as they start to earn an income is important. Not only for individuals themselves but because financial confidence can also contribute towards a focussed and productive workforce.
Which, if any, of the following, would encourage you to save more?
Having more disposable income
Tying savings to life goals
Getting cashback for saving
Making it easy to set up savings accounts
Using technology and automation to automatically transfer a percentage of your salary into savings after pay day if I was working
Receiving gamified rewards for saving such as badges, levels or prize draws for consistent saving
Receiving notifications when your spending is high or savings dip
Hearing from peers about how they have saved
If I was working having access to employer saving schemes e.g. opt-in payroll savings
Having a one-to-one coach for budgeting and saving
Don’t know
Not applicable – I do not want to save more
Other
Almost half of young people are not saving for later life
The concept of savings and retirements seems a long way off when you are 16 and may not be earning much of an income, if at all. As such it is not a surprise to see that over 60% of 16-20-year-olds are not currently saving for retirement. However, that reduces to just a quarter for 21–25-year-olds, showing that the importance of saving for the future grows with age and likely work experience. However, some young people failed to prioritise this even for the future, with one in eight not currently planning to save for their retirement at all.

"If someone had told me that at 16, if I had put 10% of my paycheck away each week, I might be getting a house at 26 instead of 30. When I was 15 or 16, I was just spending all the money on things like new Xbox games, but now I'm 21, I’m looking towards buying a house."
Lewis Perzhilla, 21, Sales Executive at Roveel
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