Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy

Purpose: Throughout the world, the dominant discourse treats “financial literacy” as both necessary and sufficient to improve the well-being of individuals and society. Findings: This essay argues that financial literacy is neither, and that promoting financial literacy is a perverse way to addres...

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Main Author: Lauren E. Willis
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bielefeld University 2018-01-01
Series:Journal of Social Science Education
Online Access:http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/848
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spelling doaj-862f1895b6b0442089380a2e773243672020-11-25T01:10:54ZdeuBielefeld UniversityJournal of Social Science Education1618-52932018-01-0116410.4119/jsse-848848Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial LiteracyLauren E. Willis0Loyola Law School Los Angeles Purpose: Throughout the world, the dominant discourse treats “financial literacy” as both necessary and sufficient to improve the well-being of individuals and society. Findings: This essay argues that financial literacy is neither, and that promoting financial literacy is a perverse way to address the inadequate retirement funding, overindebtedness, financial crises, and other social ills that have inspired governments and educators to pursue it. In its place, this essay suggests that the aim of financial education ought to be to foster finance-informed citizens, who have the capacity for civic engagement that can create citizen-informed economic policies and financial regulation. http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/848
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren E. Willis
spellingShingle Lauren E. Willis
Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy
Journal of Social Science Education
author_facet Lauren E. Willis
author_sort Lauren E. Willis
title Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy
title_short Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy
title_full Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy
title_fullStr Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy
title_full_unstemmed Finance-Informed Citizens, Citizen-Informed Finance: An Essay Occasioned by the International Handbook of Financial Literacy
title_sort finance-informed citizens, citizen-informed finance: an essay occasioned by the international handbook of financial literacy
publisher Bielefeld University
series Journal of Social Science Education
issn 1618-5293
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Purpose: Throughout the world, the dominant discourse treats “financial literacy” as both necessary and sufficient to improve the well-being of individuals and society. Findings: This essay argues that financial literacy is neither, and that promoting financial literacy is a perverse way to address the inadequate retirement funding, overindebtedness, financial crises, and other social ills that have inspired governments and educators to pursue it. In its place, this essay suggests that the aim of financial education ought to be to foster finance-informed citizens, who have the capacity for civic engagement that can create citizen-informed economic policies and financial regulation.
url http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/848
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