[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 392 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 392
Encouraging greater public-private sector collaboration to promote
financial literacy for students and young adults.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
May 11, 2023
Mr. Foster (for himself and Mr. Hill) submitted the following
resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Financial Services
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Encouraging greater public-private sector collaboration to promote
financial literacy for students and young adults.
Whereas personal financial literacy is essential to ensuring that individuals
are prepared to make informed decisions about budgeting, financial
planning, wealth accumulation, higher education loans, 529 savings
plans, managing credit cards, and managing other debt;
Whereas many young people are ill-equipped to handle major financial decisions
in an increasingly complex financial marketplace;
Whereas personal financial management skills begin to develop during childhood;
Whereas, according to the report of the Girl Scout Research Institute entitled
``Having it All: Girls and Financial Literacy'', only 12 percent of
girls feel very confident about making financial decisions;
Whereas the move away from traditional pensions and toward defined contribution
plans requires more financial education, so workers need to be equipped
with the financial aptitude to not only save and accumulate assets, but
also to turn those assets into lifetime income;
Whereas the Council for Economic Education found that only 22 States require
high schools to offer some type of personal finance course and only 17
States require that course for high school graduation;
Whereas a longitudinal research study by the University of Arizona found that
high school and college students who have been exposed to ongoing
financial education show an increase in financial knowledge;
Whereas the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection was created to educate
consumers and help consumers make better-informed financial decisions by
helping make the financial markets safer for consumers, increasing
transparency to enable individuals to compare products and make informed
decisions, and promoting policies that help consumers improve their
financial knowledge and capability;
Whereas the Bureau issued a report in 2016 that included a number of
recommendations to improve financial literacy for students;
Whereas section 342 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (12 U.S.C. 5452) directs the Federal financial regulatory agencies
to partner with high schools in targeted areas to help promote financial
literacy and to create ``industry internships, summer employment, and
full-time positions'' for talented minorities and women;
Whereas the 2015 National Financial Capability Study, developed in consultation
with the Department of the Treasury and President Obama's Advisory
Council on Financial Capability, updates key measures from the 2009
National Financial Capability Study of American adults and deepens the
exploration of topics that are highly relevant today, including student
loans and medical debt;
Whereas the Money as You Learn initiative, a coalition of non-profit and for
profit organizations, teachers, and academics, provides concrete tools
for educators to show how personal finance can provide appropriate
context and content for mathematics and English language arts teaching;
Whereas the Federal Reserve System offers publications in English and Spanish
that provide consumers tips on a broad range of topics, from avoiding
mortgage foreclosure scams to managing a checking account; and
Whereas a study conducted by Daniel Fernandes, John G. Lynch, Jr., and Richard
Netemeyer entitled ``Financial Literacy, Financial Education and
Downstream Financial Behaviors'' found that it ``is best to provide
assistance just before a decision is made in what is known as `just-in-
time education''': Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) emphasizes the importance of raising awareness of
individual financial capability by providing relevant
information, financial workshops, and other decision-making
tools to consumers of all ages;
(2) reaffirms the purposes of section 342 of the Dodd-Frank
Act (12 U.S.C. 5452), which directs Federal financial agencies
to partner with organizations that are focused on developing
opportunities for minorities and women to place talented young
minorities and women in industry internships, summer
employment, and full-time positions;
(3) supports the efforts of the Bureau of Consumer Finance
Protection to provide consumers with relevant information and
decision-making tools regarding important financial decisions;
and
(4) urges the Department of the Treasury to consult with
the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and implement
future national financial capability studies.
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