The financial acumen of Australian 15-year-olds has fallen significantly
since 2012 according to an OECD study
which surveyed nearly 15,000
school students.
The OECD's Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) also
found that girls outperform boys in financial literacy and that,
while both genders'
understanding
of financial matters has declined, boys are falling faster than girls.
The study also found that low socio-economic status students and
indigenous students lag a long
way behind others in their financial literacy.
The results for indigenous
students are particularly concerning as their performance has fallen
much faster than the general population of 15-year-olds.
The PISA study compared students' financial literacy in 2015 to an
earlier study in 2012 and assessed their knowledge of personal finances
and their ability to deal with financial issues.
The study was carried out in Australia by the Australian Council for
Educational Research and CEO Geoff Masters said the decline in financial
literacy was in line with the fall in 15-year-olds' ability
in maths and reading, which was revealed in another PISA report last
December.
In 2015 Australian students scored an average of 504 points in the PISA
test, down from 526 in 2012. But
in the latest test students in the lowest socio economic quartile scored
454 and
indigenous students students scored only 411.
Even though the financial literacy of Australian students is declining,
Australia still performs above the OECD average and outperforms
countries such as the United States, Poland, Italy and Spain.
But many countries with high performing students who do very well in the
PISA reading and maths tests – such as Finland, South Korea, Japan and
Singapore – are not included in the financial literacy test.
The Australian PISA test was assisted by funding from the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission. ASIC deputy chair Peter Kell said
it indicated "that there is more
to be done
in Australia to build financial literacy and capability at all levels of
education".