Author: Mudita Tiwari
As we meander through the thatched mud-stained and brick houses in Uttar Pradesh, our team asks a curious group of smiling clients - “What did you learn at the training session?” or “Does it help when our team reminds you about your savings goals?” The answer is inevitably a yes, but the “yes” comes at a cost. Financial Literacy Education (FE) is most often a classroom based approach conducted either by the financial institutions (such as EKO, FINO), or an NGO (such as Parinam Foundation) or by research institutions (such as CMF), and is most often funded by international funding agencies. International funders and Indian financial institutions agree that educating and enabling clients about the products they are using is critical.
Therefore, FE is currently being offered along with financial access to basic financial services in various parts of the country. Institutions like CMF have collaborated with financial partners on the ground to evaluate FE programs and initial findings indicate that FE must:
- Be simple, preferably short, and creative to engage and build a relationship with the clients
- Use a demand driven approach based on client needs
- Should be interactive (possibly using creative and engaging role plays, dramatizations, and mediums such as television) and not just didactic
- Must include teachable moments based on client experiences
- Remind clients about training content to encourage sustained behavioral change
Currently most financial institutions offer a non-intensive 2-3 day training session for their new clients, though most institutions seem to agree that offering basic financial services along with FE is cost intensive and may not be sustainable in the long run. Additionally, it is unreasonable to expect international agencies to bear the bulk of the burden for FE trainings over the long-term. So how can the eventual funding gap be resolved? Some experts have suggested:
- Micro-credit institutions must consider FE as an investment and not an expense, and must invest in FE themselves. The better the FE, the more the clients will invest in their product.
- Financial institution must offer simpler, demand driven products so that there isn’t a requirement for an intensive FE.
- Financial institution can consider offering KGFS type products so that clients are offered holistic wealth management sessions and not just classroom based training.
- Funders must play a more critical role in ensuring financial institutions make FE a part of their product offering.
- Fundamentally re-think the concept of FE as a standalone component. Maybe FE must be readdressed as a part of improving client’s behavior towards finances (such as enabling clients to meet their financial needs, building knowledge about financial goals, providing ability to select appropriate products, staying informed about financial happenings). After all, FE is a sub-component of building financial capacity in clients, not a standalone component in changing financial behavior.
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