To help your employees navigate the difficult economy, you might want to consider offering interoffice financial literacy and planning programs.
Brandes Investment Partners is giving ten young Canadians $1,000 each for demonstrating their financial literacy smarts this summer. Read: Online challenge tests financial literacy The firm offers a post-secondary scholarship program, which runs a national contest each year. This time around, more than 3,500 students between the ages of 16 and 22 voluntarily participated via […]
We’re committed to making your practice better, so all this month, we’re delivering you a daily takeaway.
It’s the beginning of the CE cycle, and you may think you have all the time in the world.
We’re committed to making your practice better, so all this month, we’re delivering you a daily takeaway.
Canadian parents are unsure how to teach their children to be financially savvy, says a new survey from ING Direct.
IIROC says its president and CEO, Susan Wolburgh Jenah, will chair the International Forum for Investor Education (IFIE)—an alliance that promotes higher standards and information sharing in financial and investor education.
Alongside the presidential election, another vote will be taking place this year in the U.S.—teachers are currently asking citizens to also help decide which students are worthy of a financial education.
When it comes to finances, Canadians are not completely illiterate, but they might be over-rating their own knowledge of financial matters. There is definitely room for improvement, according to the inaugural BMO Financial Literacy Report Card.
Canadians award themselves a B on their level of financial literacy, but say they need to learn a great deal more, according to research from Investors Group.