I am Anna Lusardi the Academic Director
of the Global Financial Literacy Excellence Center, or GFLEC. We are delighted to host the US release of the PISA financial
literacy assessment in collaboration with three of the most important
institutions for financial literacy in the US: The Department of Education, The
Department of the Treasury, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
For the financial literacy expert group
that designed the PISA assessment, this has been a long journey. We first met
in 2010 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where I was asked to chair the group. For
the next 2.5 years, we met regularly – in five different countries — to work on
the assessment. And now many members of the group have traveled yet again —
some from as far as New Zealand — to be here. I want to thank that work team
for an exceptional collaboration. For us, this is a day of celebration.
We are at the beginning of something
momentous. The new PISA data will serve as an important tool in helping us
assess how much the young know and to guide programs and policies that can
improve financial literacy among young people.
To help us understand the data and how
it can be used, we have Andreas Schleicher from the OECD here. Andreas, who has
been in charge of PISA, travels around the world advising countries on their
educational policies. We are so
fortunate to have him here today. The OECD was visionary in unveiling the PISA
initiative in the year 2000, and it showed leadership again when it added
financial literacy to the assessment in 2012. At GFLEC, we are very proud of
our collaboration with the OECD.
Also this morning we will hear from two
speakers whose financial literacy work goes back many years. Secretary of
Education Arne Duncan will discuss the PISA findings together with John Rogers,
the chair of the President’s Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans. And we will hear from Richard Cordray, the
Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and Mary John Miller, the
Under Secretary for Domestic Finance at the US Department of the Treasury. The
word passion has come up when they speak about financial literacy.
For most of us here today, it is hard not
to be passionate about this topic. Financial literacy is critically important
for young people. While still in high school, students face life-changing
decisions – notably about whether to continue their education and how to pay
for it if they do. Financial literacy is also important for job readiness. But
financial literacy may remain elusive unless we identify how – and where –
financial education can achieve effective results.
There’s no question that it “takes a
village” to make progress on financial literacy. That’s why I’m so pleased to
have representatives from the private sector, from universities, and from other
institutions join our conversation today. I know some of them are working on innovative
ideas. In particular, I’m grateful to PwC for its support of this event. We
will hear more this afternoon about the impressive work they are doing on
financial literacy in schools.
You’ll also hear from students as the
day goes on, and at the end of the day, from a surprise guest – although it
might be hard to hide her all day. Who better to motivate and inspire students
than a star athlete? At the George Washington University School of Business, we
have a customized executive MBA program – STAR EMBA. “STAR” stands for Special
Talent, Access and Responsibilities. One of our STAR “students” will join us on
stage at the end of the day.
The broad impact of the PISA assessment
cannot be underestimated. It has already sparked others to collect more data. McGraw
Hill Financial and Gallup, for example, have launched the Global Financial Literacy Research project, which is collecting
financial literacy data among adults in 148 countries. This adds data from a
different age group and a larger set of countries. I’ll be working on this
project, too, and I am excited about how this will enrich our understanding of
financial literacy. And I would like to thank McGraw Hill Financial too for
their support.
Please take note of the title of PISA’s latest volume, “Students and Money: Financial Literacy Skills for the 21st century.” Just as it was not possible to live in an industrialized society without the ability to read and write, so it is not possible to thrive in today’s world without being financially literate.