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Advocates for Young Adults  
WORKPLACE WELLNESS
Workplace wellness in the 21st century is a serious issue. Today's employees
face unprecedented challenges to their well-being. Employers will benefit by
tackling negative worker stress, which reportedly costs employers over $200
billion annually. So, why are we so stressed?

Stressed-Out Parents Cost Companies $300 Billion in Lost Productivity

Consequences of Stress
The State of Financial Literacy in America
(from Young Americans Center for Financial Education)

In a nation where nearly a third of high school seniors already use a credit card,
a higher proportion have an ATM card, and more than 1.5 million families filed
for personal bankruptcy last year, the need for personal financial literacy is
apparent.  Yet fewer than 30 percent of young Americans are given the
opportunity to take as much as one week’s worth of course work in money
management or personal finance in high school.

The following statistics further describe the state of financial literacy in America
today.

American Children, Teenagers and Young Adults:
•        Of the 4,000 students who took the Jump$tart personal finance survey in
2004, 65.5% received failing scores. (1)
•        A study of 1,065 teens found that 21% of 18 and 19-year-olds have
credit   cards. (2)
•        People in the 18 to 24 age bracket spend nearly 30% of their monthly
income just on debt repayment - double the percentage spent in 1992 (10% of
net income is a recommended amount for debt obligation). (3)
•        American children, teens and young adults (ages 8-21) earned about
$211 billion in 2003.  This group is spending at a rate of approximately $172
billion per year. (4)
•        The average 21-year-old in the U.S. will spend more than 2.2 million in
their lifetime. (5)
American Families:
•        40% of Americans say they live beyond their means. (6)
•        Between 25 million and 56 million adults are unbanked (i.e. not using
mainstream, insured financial institutions.) (7)
•        The average household with debt carries approximately $10,000 to
$12,000 in total revolving debt and has 9 credit cards. (1)
•        50.8% of college-age adults agree with this statement: “I have experienced
repeated, unsuccessful attempts to control, cut back or stop excessive money
use.” (8)
•        In 2005, savings rates dipped to minus 0.5 percent, something that hasn't
happened since the Great Depression in 1932 and 1933.  A negative savings
rate means that Americans spent all their disposable income and dipped into
past savings or increased their borrowing. (9)
•        Americans shelled out more than $24 billion in credit card fees in 2004, an
18% increase over the previous year. (10)
College Students:
•        45% of college students are in credit card debt, the average credit card
debt being more than $3,000. (1)
•        University administrators state that they lose more students to credit card
debt than to academic failure. (11)

Bankruptcies, Defaults, and Foreclosures:
•        The number of 18 to 24-year-olds declaring bankruptcy has increased
96% in 10 years. (12)
•        In 2002, more people filed for bankruptcy than graduated from college in
2002. (13)  
•        Personal bankruptcies nearly doubled in the past decade, including more
than 1.6 million people who filed for personal bankruptcy in 2003. (14)
•        Home foreclosures in 2002 reached the highest rate in 30 years. (15)
Financial Literacy Education:
•        38 states have personal finance standards or guidelines, 21 states with
standards require them to be implemented, 8 states require a course with
personal finance content, 7 states require students to take a personal finance
course to graduate. (16)
•        More than 9 in 10 adults and students believe it is important for the people
of the United States to have a good understanding of economics.  However, only
half of high school students say they ever have been taught economics in
school.  (16)

Sources:
(1) Jump$tart Coalition, 2005
(2) Junior Achievement, 2005
(3) Generation Broke: The Growth of Debt Among Young Americans
(4) Harris Interactive, 2003
(5) Share-Save-Spend.com
(6) Fort Worth Business Press 2002
(7) Oversight Hearing on Financial Education and Literacy, 2004
(8) MyVesta 2002
(9) U.S. Commerce Department, 2006
(10) Cardweb.com, 2005
(11) Utah Mentor, 2003
(12) Richmond Credit Abuse Resistant Education (CARE) Program
(13) U.S. Department of the Treasury
(14) Annual Hawaii Economic and Financial Literacy Conference, 2004
(15) Senate Resolution 48, 2003
(16) National Council on Economic Education, 2003