The Issue of the 21st Century
“If you don’t know better, you cannot do better.”
On Monday, businessman, author, and social entrepreneur John Hope Bryant used this statement to support a Huffington Post op-ed in which he boldly asserts that financial literacy is not simply a goal for which all must strive, but is moreover, a universal right of every human being. Bryant notes that the struggle for civil rights characterized the 20th century; and he believes the challenge of achieving universal financial literacy will characterize the 21st.
But is financial literacy a “right,” equivalent to civil rights? I personally have to say no. We must use caution in characterizing anything as unequivocally endowed upon birth. What I do believe, though, is in the importance of education. I will always be an advocate for knowledge and believe in its power to generate progress, growth, and development – on both the micro and macro levels.
A year and a half ago, this core belief in education was the foundation for my support of financial literacy efforts. That was prior to the economic wake-up call of 2008 and prior to my time with ACCION USA. Now, my support is grounded in my everyday work, where I continually see the detriments of financial illiteracy.
My colleagues have spent hours working with clients to dispute credit report errors, resolve stolen identities, and create payment plans for collections accounts. After months of work, many of these individuals continue their struggles in resolving these issues.
Furthermore, payday loans, high-fee credit cards, check cashers, and other predatory services populate the financial world in which many of ACCION USA’s clients exist. For many, this is reality – and the only one they have ever known. And with the FDIC’s recent white paper reporting that 25% of the U.S. population lacks a relationship with a financial institution, financial illiteracy is quickly becoming an issue that permeates socio-economic borders.
Whether mismanagement, misunderstanding, or mistrust lie at the root of these situations, they all share a common solution and, more importantly, prevention: financial literacy.
It is our hope that ACCION USA’s financial education program may meaningfully address the growing issue of financial illiteracy. With each workshop, each counseling session, each webinar, and each article, we are helping people “know better”…and with that, as Bryant says, we can empower them to “do better.”
If financial literacy empowerment is the issue of the 21st century, ACCION USA certainly has a hand in the game.
Tags: accion usa, financial literacy, huffington post, illiteracy, john hope bryant, predatory lenders, right
