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Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION

Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

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Page 1: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

Lessons from the2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys

COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION

Rekha Reddy The World Bank

October [email protected]

Page 2: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

The 2012 Financial Capabilities Surveys

o Surveys sponsored by the World Bank Russia Trust Fund for Financial Literacy and Education and the World Bank Latin America Region in conjunction with national counterpartso Colombia: Banco de la Republica o Mexico: CNBV and CONDUSEF

o Survey developed from qualitative research that began in 2010o Nationally representative surveys: those 18 years and older

making financial decisions for their household or themselveso Colombia: 1,526 respondents o Mexico: 2,022 respondents

o Countries customized core Russia Trust Fund questionnaire (ex: OECD-INFE financial knowledge module, financial education, use of government programs)

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Page 3: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

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Topics for Presentation

Challenges in Financial Capabilities

1. Imprecise Daily Money Management

2. Incomplete Planning for the Future

3. Decisions on Financial Products with Insufficient Financial Knowledge

4. One Country’s Data Do Not Fit All

Financial Capabilities Interventions with Impact

Page 4: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

95% in Colombia and 74% in Mexico said they planned their daily expenditures in some way

Most plan daily expenditures

Most plan daily expenditures

79% in Colombia and 69% of Mexicans report that they keep to these household budgeting plans

But fewer plan regularly

But fewer plan regularly

Less than a quarter of survey respondents knew exactly how much they spent in the last weekOr preciselyOr precisely

In both countries, approximately 60% of respondents reported having being short of money for basic necessities at least once.

Which could exacerbate already existing resource gaps

Which could exacerbate already existing resource gaps

1. For Most, Daily Money Management is ImpreciseOf those surveyed who have some responsibility for household expenses…

Page 5: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

49% of Mexican survey respondents and 23% of Colombian respondents felt they could cover a major unexpected expense without borrowing

Unexpected Expenses

Unexpected Expenses

Children’s Future

Children’s Future

A minority reported contributing to a future pension in both countries: 10% of those under age 60 in Colombia, 28% in Mexico

Old AgeOld Age

2. Planning for Future Expenses is Incomplete

More than half of the parents surveyed in both countries had plans to support their children’s education

Plans to save for children’s inheritance were less common (less than 30%)

Of those surveyed who had some responsibility for their household expenses…

Page 6: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

3. Most Report Researching Financial Products

Of those surveyed who had some responsibility for their household expenses…

Verify terms and conditions in detail

Verify terms and conditions before contracting

Look to find the most appropriate product for needs

Consider various alternatives before deciding

Look for information from distinct sources

0% 10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%

ColombiaMexico

In both countries, men and those with higher levels of education are more likely to make decisions about financial products.

Page 7: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

3…But Limited Knowledge of Interest RatesHinders Decisions on Financial Products

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Source: Colombia and Mexico data are from World Bank analysis of 2012 Colombia and Mexico survey data on financial capabilities . Non-Mexico data are from Atkinson, A. and F. Messy (2012), “Measuring Financial Literacy: Results of the OECD / International Network on Financial Education (INFE) Pilot Study. The samples for Colombia and Mexico were constructed including only those individuals who make financial decisions, which may affect representativeness, while the INFE countries did not use that filter.

68% of Colombian respondents and 51% of Mexican respondents state that no one--not a parent, a teacher or other—taught them to manage their money.

Page 8: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

Men/WomenMen/

Women Rural/UrbanRural/UrbanFormal/Informal

Employment

Formal/Informal

Employment

4. One Country’s Data Does Not Fit All: Financial Capabilities Differ among Key Segments

Of those surveyed who had some responsibility for their household expenses…

Similarly Vulnerable Rural respondents were

more likely to report being short of money

Differences in Planning In Colombia, those in rural

areas were more likely to plan, while in Mexico it is the reverse

Consistent Product Usage Patterns

Relatively more men use deposit accounts and credit cards than women

Differences in Relative Financial Knowledge Women scored similarly to

men on financial knowledge in Mexico, but worse on every question in Colombia

.

Similarly Indebted A higher proportion of the

informally employed say they borrow more than they can afford

Differences in Surplus In Mexico, the informally

employed were far less likely to have disposable income, whereas the Colombian formal and informally employed were fairly similar

Page 9: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

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Topics for Presentation

Challenges in Financial Capabilities

1. Imprecise Daily Money Management

2. Incomplete Planning for the Future

3. Analyzing Financial Products with Insufficient Financial Knowledge

4. One Country’s Data Do Not Fit All

Financial Capabilities Interventions with Impact

Page 10: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

Product Design Can Support Improved Daily Money Management and Planning for Future Expenses

Designs with Impact on Financial Capabilities

o Savingso Commitment savings accounts: After one year, individuals in the Philippines

who gave up access to their savings for a period increased savings 81% relative to a control group (Ashraf et. al 2006)

o Labels for savings accounts with specific goals: Treatment group in Ghana with access to accounts in which individuals named specific savings goals saved 31% more on average than the control group (Karlan et. al 2012)

o Reminders to save: Letters or text messages from the financial institutions(FI in Bolivia, Peru and the Philippines increased the likelihood of reaching savings goals by 3% and the total saved in the reminding FI by 6%. (Karlan et. al, 2010)

o Automatic enrollment in pensions: Under automatic enrollment, participation in a United States firm’s 401K plan increased from a low base to between 86% and 96% of employees (Choi et. al 2004)

Page 11: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

Financial Education and Consumer Protection are Complementary Interventions for Financial Capabilities

Targeted financial education has shown impact:o Financial capabilities survey data showed desires and concerns can vary widely by

demographic group

o Ex: Brazil financial literacy program for at students and their parents.

o Where the student curriculum was provided in conjunction with the parent financial literacy workshop, the program raised students’ savings rates by 24%, and increased the percentage of parents who track monthly expenses by 17% (Bruhn et. al forthcoming).

o New interventions planned for younger students, certain groups of women

Consumer protection-particularly consistent disclosure requirements across financial products- can compensate for limitations in financial knowledge: o (Anagol et. al 2012) found that 60-80% of Indian insurance agents recommended

unsuitable high commission products. Requiring commission disclosures for one product led agents to recommend other products without disclosure requirement.

o Forthcoming study (Gine, Mazer et. al) evaluating the effectiveness of Mexico’s credit disclosure reforms on consumer understanding & financial decision-making

Page 12: Lessons from the 2012 Colombian and Mexican Financial Capabilities Surveys COLOMBIA-OECD-WORLD BANK CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL EDUCATION Rekha Reddy The World

Muchas gracias!

For more information:

Colombia Team

Dairo Ayiber Estrada- [email protected]

Nancy Zamudio Gomez- [email protected]

Mexico Team

Arturo Luna [email protected]

Luis [email protected]

World Bank

Rekha [email protected]