Financial Education/Consumer Education : An essential component of the fast evolving financial landscape. 36th IOSCO Annual Conference

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Financial Education/Consumer Education : An essential component of the fast evolving financial landscape 36th IOSCO Annual Conference Flore-Anne Messy Principal Administrator, Financial Education and Consumer Protection Unit OECD Financial Affairs Division

Outline Financial education: a growing policy priority in the new financial landscape Addressing policy and stakeholders concerns: The international OECD financial education project OECD and its INFE s main messages Challenges ahead ongoing and future endeavours

What is financial education? OECD 2005 Definition: A Capacity Building Process by which financial consumers/investors improve their understanding of financial/insurance products and concepts; and through information, instruction and/or objective advice develop the skills and confidence to become more aware of financial risks and opportunities to make informed choices, to know where to go for help, and take other effective actions to improve their financial well-being and protection. Outcome is Financial literacy/capability

Financial education: a growing policy priority in the new financial landscape 1) An overlooked premise of the sustainable and inclusive development of financial services and their regulatory framework 2) A critical skill in the context of changing equilibrium and financial landscape Increasing transfer of risks to individuals More consumers have access or should have access to financial services More complex sophisticated financial landscape Prudential Regulation is not enough Asymmetry of information, knowledge and power Importance of individuals financial decisions but

Financial education: a growing policy priority in the new financial landscape (cont.) 3) In all countries -albeit with important disparities-, worryingly low levels of financial (OECD/INFE 2010 survey): Attitude : Confidence and Care Awareness, Knowledge and Understanding Skills (shopping around) Responsible behaviours A few telling examples : Only 10% of respondents provided correct answers to a series of very simple financial knowledge questions (source US 2009 survey) At the same time, 37% self-assessed their financial knowledge as very high Globally surveys show that young people, women, low income groups display much lower level of financial knowledge A majority of individuals have difficulty in planning ahead -and for retirement -and do not feel confident dealing with financial issues Only good news from the crisis: the public is more interested in financial issues: a teachable moment?

Financial education: a growing policy priority in the new financial landscape (cont.) 4) Together with financial consumer protection, financial education has become one of the pillars of the new financial regulatory framework (Source OECD/INFE 2009 & 2010 surveys) Increasing number of dedicated financial education initiatives and development of national strategies in more than 20 surveyed countries (Source OECD/INFE Survey 2010) Financial education policies goes hand in hand with a global shift towards reinforced consumer protection illustrated by the 2 most recent : G20 Communiqués in November in Seoul and February in Paris

Efficient financial education should benefit all involved stakeholders but should be integrated through a holistic approach Which includes: Financial inclusion and access strategies Financial education and awareness Financial consumer protection Competition governance and prudential regulation

OECD Response : A Global Financial Education Strategy Started in 2003 Purpose: respond to the objective of policymakers and other stakeholders to improve financial literacy Serviced by 2 OECD committees - The Committee on Financial Markets - The Insurance and Private Pensions Committee 3 pillars : 1. Data collection, research and international analytical framework 2. Internationally recognised standard setting objectives 3. International dissemination and co-operation Extensive and global programme of work

1) Reference international research and work 2005 OECD issued the first international publication on financial education 2008 First analysis on: - Risk awareness and insurance education - Private Pensions and saving for retirement 2008 Several reports on specific issues: - Credit - National pension awareness - Annuities and FE - Risk awareness on large-scale risks - FE at schools - Evaluation of FE programmes

2) OECD : the international standard-setter on financial education 4 sets of recommendations Principles and Good practices on Financial Education and Awareness (endorsed by OECD Council in 2005) Good Practices for Financial Education Relating to Private Pensions (endorsed by OECD Council in 2008) Good Practices for Enhanced Risk Awareness and Education on Insurance Issues (endorsed by OECD Council in 2008) Good Practices on Financial Education and Awareness Relating to Credit (endorsed by OECD Council in 2009) More to come notably on financial education in schools

3) Global dissemination and ownership International Network on Financial Education Public experts on financial education from 76 countries and 160 public bodies 6 meetings since 2008 2011 meetings : Toronto, 25 May; Cape Town, 26 October All Public experts interested in financial education are welcome to join Creation of regional fora Central Banks in Asia (in March 2010); second meeting in June 2011 in Jakarta Co-operation with international stakeholders Relevant international partners: the EC, the IMF, the World Bank, the ILO, AFI OECD and major global economies (through MOU) Selected market players and NGOs

3) Global dissemination : selected OECD international events on financial education New Delhi, 2006 G8 in Moscow, 2006 Istanbul, 2007 Washington D.C., 2008 with US Treasury Bali, 2008, with Bank Indonesia Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, 2009 Bangalore, 2010 with RBI with Central Bank of Italy and Lebanon in June 2010 and Oct 2010 12

3) International Gateway for Financial Education First global clearinghouse on financial education www.financial-education.org +80 countries covered +120 programmes summarised +170 articles, research +160 web links and resources

OECD/INFE Key messages for more efficient financial education 1) FRAMEWORK Complement but not substitute to the regulatory framework and market conduct Assess the needs and gaps in financial literacy and map existing programmes Identify clear and realistic policy goals Earmark long-term and sustainable resources Prioritize target audience Design evaluation at the outset of programmes 14

2) STAKEHOLDERS ACTIONS AND ROLES Coordination of initiatives at national level: Establishment of national strategy Avoiding duplication and setting responsibilities Governments as coordinators/facilitators Specific requirements for financial institutions: Financial education is part of good governance Accountable and responsible for: Provision of suitable information and advice Promotion of financial awareness Involvement of a variety of partners NGOS, private and local networks and actors

3) APPROPRIATE and ADAPTED TOOLS Focus on quality disclosure Start as early as possible and at school Ongoing, life-time and continuous process Identify target audience and their preference Use a variety of channels and medias Develop relevant resources Use simple, engaging and tailored messages Teach the teachers

4) FINANCIAL EDUCATION S LIMITS FE is no panacea and is a long-term process FE has limits: links between financial knowledge and behaviours are not obvious FE is a new policy priority: more robust evaluation on efficiency of various programmes and international measure and data on financial literacy are needed Consumers are not rational : Passive behaviours even if they are properly informed Numerous psychological/behavioral biases Solutions to counter these limits at least on the short term (default mechanisms) should be considered where necessary Appropriate regulation to prevent notably fraud & bankruptcies and offer easy redress and improve the quality of financial information and transparency

OECD/INFE ongoing work: Responding to challenges ahead Expert INFE subgroup on evaluation of financial education Guide and method and Principles to be released in 2011 Expert subgroup on measurement of financial literacy: First results of pilot exercise : May 2011 Inclusion of financial literacy in PISA 2012 : first framework available Expert subgroup on financial education at schools Outputs : guidelines, learning framework, comparative reports -2011 Expert subgroup on the development of national strategies Outputs: high level principles and report in 2011

OECD/INFE ongoing work: Responding to challenges ahead (cont.) Specific research on behavioural and psychological economics (special academic session in Rome and in Canada- forthcoming) Work on the roles of financial intermediaries (case of insurance sector) Focusing on major policy priorities: - pensions (awareness, DC schemes, pensions coverage) - credit; savings and investment Special attention to vulnerable groups and especially women Development of work in complementary fields : - Financial inclusion : INFE subgroup - Consumer protection : new OECD Task Force to respond to G20 call

Financial education remains a relatively new policy area which benefits from the experience and expertise of various stakeholders Looking forward to a fruitful discussion THANK YOU! Flore-anne.messy@oecd.org International Gateway for Financial Education www.financial-education.org