Martin Bjornberg is right to emphasise the role of financial education and financial literacy in a thriving economy and society (“Address financial literacy and UK can be like Sweden”, Letters, May 3).
However, financial education and financial literacy are now as much about digital and data literacy as understanding calculations about money.
Advanced information technology and the digitisation of our everyday life has transformed the way we interact and the way we transact. Financial literacy and education are therefore now also about the process of decision-making and of understanding who and what we are interacting and transacting with.
Obviously, the public also needs to still understand how to evaluate the performance of investment decisions.
Bill Gates’s 1994 quote that “banking is necessary, but banks are not” is now widely seen as common sense. That transformation highlights the need for financial education to go beyond investments and the merits and risks of various personal credit options.
The current inquiry by the UK House of Commons education select committee must explore that wider context if it is to contribute to greater financial literacy in future generations.
The alternative is akin to a language school teaching Middle English to students hoping to work in the Anglosphere.
Zsófia Kräussl
Senior Lecturer in Finance and Technology
Bayes Business School
City, University of London
London EC1, UK