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BUSINESS TODAY 18 July 2019

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18.07.19 4 NEWS MASSIMO COSTA A fi nancial literacy study has found that 72% of adults in Malta, just over one in fi ve, are able to face a major expense equivalent to their income without hav- ing to borrow money or turn to family members. e study, however, indicates lower scores for younger cohorts, with 62% of those aged 20 to 29 and 68% of those 30 to 39 being equipped to deal with such an expense. e survey was carried out by Gemma, the Family Ministry's 2017-2019 strate- gy on retirement and fi nancial capabili- ty, which also runs a fi nancial capability portal at gemma.gov.mt aiming to help people in matters such as retirement savings, money management and invest- ment. It was based on the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Develop- ment/International Network on Finan- cial Education toolkit, with a number of other participant countries carrying out similar surveys. In total, the study in Malta asked 1,000 respondents about issues related with managing their fi nances and their fi nan- cial behaviour and level of knowledge. It found that 64% of adults have not encountered a situation in which their income did not cover their living ex- penses in the last 12 months, and that, of the 33% who experienced a situation in which their income didn't stretch enough to cover such expenses, 86% used meth- ods such as cutting back on spending to address the problem. One in three respondents, or 32%, said they tended to worry about paying their normal expenses, while 20% indicated that this was rarely the case. Another 19% stated they worried often about this matter, and 18% said they always wor- ried. e Gozo region had the highest per- centage of respondents who indicated they always tended to worry about pay- ing their day-to-day expenses. A very large majority of adult respond- ents - 93% - said they were active savers, with 84% of adults using a savings/de- posit account to save. When it comes to keeping an eye on household fi nances, the most popular way of doing so for Maltese adults was by noting down their spending, with 46% using this method. In terms of personal fi nances, 62% of adults said they kept a close watch on their fi nancial aff airs. is was consider- ably higher than the average of all partic- ipating countries, which stands at 51%, and that of all OECD countries, which registers at 50%. When it comes to paying their bills, 95% of Maltese adults stated they always or often did so on time. Some 80% of adults also said that always or often carefully considered whether they could aff ord to buy something prior to purchasing it. Most feel they don't have excessive debt Only 13% of all respondents indicated that they had "too much debt" at the mo- ment, with 75% disagreeing or complete- ly disagreeing that their level of debt was excessive. e remaining 12% of respondent nei- ther agreed nor disagree with the state- ment "I have too much debt right now." e greatest number of those who agreed or completely agreed that they had too much debt were those in the 30 to 39 age cohort. e survey also asked about the level of fi nancial knowledge amongst respond- ents, with 44% rating this as average, and 21% considering themselves to possess a very high or quite a high level of overall knowledge on fi nancial matters. Over 70% of adults can cope with major expense without needing to borrow money, survey finds Financial literacy study indicates that just over one in fi ve adults in Malta cannot deal with a large expense When it comes to keeping an eye on household finances, the most popular way of doing so for Maltese adults was by noting down their spending, with 46% using this method

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