Financial Literacy: Identification of the Challenges, Needs, and Difficulties among Adults Living in Rural Areas
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- What are rural adults’ specific financial literacy needs and challenges in their own opinion?
- What are the specific financial literacy needs and challenges faced by rural adults in the opinion of financial experts?
3. Research Results and Discussion
4. Conclusions
- Financial fraud awareness: Participants across all countries expressed low awareness of financial fraud, particularly in digital contexts, highlighting the need for education on protecting personal information.
- Budgeting and emergency funds: There was a clear need for improved understanding and skills related to budgeting, managing household expenses, and building emergency funds.
- Balancing risk and Rerard: Participants showed a preference for investing in business activities but lacked knowledge about insurance products, financial tools, and the implications of financial decisions. Additionally, they revealed a lack of confidence in financial tools provided by banks
- Retirement planning and savings: Concerns about future financial security were common, with participants expressing interest in learning more about retirement planning, taxes, and long-term savings.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Criteria/Thematic Area | Description | Main Findings |
---|---|---|
Focus group description | The panel consisted of people of different age groups, backgrounds, and professions from rural areas who declared no prior education or training in finance and expressed their interest in enhancing their financial literacy. | The participants were 18–65; among them were farmers, permanently employed professionals, individual entrepreneurs, unemployed individuals, retired individuals, and refugees residing in rural areas. |
A. Self-assessment of financial literacy | In the first section of the questionnaire, adults from rural areas were asked to provide a general assessment of their financial knowledge and rate their degree of interest related to a virtual escape room tool on financial literacy. | The majority of the focus group rated their financial literacy as low and insufficient for making financial decisions. Participants indicated their strong interest in taking various forms of financial literacy training, including virtual escape rooms on financial literacy. Moreover, it was pointed out that older participants were more concerned about their abilities to work with new interactive educational instruments, such as e-learning courses and escape rooms, due to their limited computer skills. Employed and unemployed and businessmen mentioned the necessity of enhancing financial literacy for pursuing their professional goals. |
B. Testing financial knowledge | In the second section of the survey, participants were asked to take a short test that consisted of three questions on basic financial literacy knowledge related to the time value of money, inflation, and financial investment concepts. | The quick financial knowledge test results confirmed the need to improve adults’ financial knowledge and competencies. Many participants do not understand the concept of the time value of money and its applications; there is a lack of general knowledge on the investment decision-making process, particularly diversification to minimize the investment risk. |
C. Dimensions of financial literacy | In the third section of the questionnaire, the interviewer tested the competence of focus group participants on five different topics of financial literacy. The main results are summarized in the presented rows below (I–VI). | |
I. Financial fraud awareness | In this section, respondents assessed their awareness and ability to resist financial fraud, including concerns about personal data protection in communication with financial institutions and intermediaries and the safety of electronic and digital channels for payment. | Most respondents assessed their awareness of financial fraud as low and pointed out that they had insufficient competencies to resist the associated risks. The main threats included the inability to find reliable information on the types of financial fraud, the failure to protect against personal data stealing, suspicious mailings, phishing scams, cyberattacks, and telephone and online fraud. Participants highlighted the importance of Internet information campaigns on financial fraud and their eagerness to enhance their knowledge on related topics. |
II. Budgeting and emergency funds | This section concerned the issues of personal finances, including budgeting and such concepts as income, costs, cash management, and short-term savings. | Most participants’ budgeting and personal financial management knowledge is moderate or low. Many respondents do not plan their spending or have an emergency fund. However, the majority of participants indicated the availability of savings for a period from two to six months. Older participants declared a higher cautiousness on the issues of savings and emergency funds than their younger counterparts. Respondents highlighted the significant role of crediting institutions in providing emergency financing. |
III. Balancing risk and reward | In this section, respondents evaluated their understanding of financial risk, its sources and factors, and the instruments used to mitigate the risks. The survey paid particular attention to insurance and its cost. | The participants demonstrated limited knowledge of the financial risk concept and the relationship between risk and reward. However, some respondents could identify the major types of risks and their sources and classify the financial instruments for risk management. Notably, most participants were familiar with or used different types of insurance, including life and asset insurance. The awareness of insurance mechanisms increased in the regions and groups with a higher income. |
IV. Planning for retirement or other long-term savings | This section focused on long-term financial management, including building a retirement plan and constructing a long-term financial strategy. | The younger respondents’ knowledge of long-term financial management and retirement plans was very limited. Older respondents demonstrated a good understanding of pension and retirement plans and underlined the necessity for long-term savings. In their financial strategies, the respondents seem to rely on more ‘sustainable’ instruments, such as long-term investment in real estate or saving money in bank deposit accounts. |
V. Investment products | The section evaluated the respondents’ knowledge of investment and the investing process, the concept of risk diversification, and the portfolio structure. | Respondents demonstrated limited knowledge of investments and the investing process. Some participants were able to identify the main financial instruments, including stocks, bonds, and loans, as well as to underline the role of the interest rate in the investing process. In their financial strategies, most respondents preferred investing in less risky instruments, such as bank deposit accounts, compared to the high risk of investing in stocks and derivatives. |
VI. Other dimensions | Respondents were asked about other areas of interest in finances. | Respondents expressed their interest in improving their knowledge of taxes and taxation, as well as of macroeconomic and corporate financial indicators and ratios. |
Criteria/Thematic Area | Description | Main Findings |
---|---|---|
1. Diagnosis of financial literacy deficiencies among adults | In the section, experts investigated main financial matters where low financially literate adults living in rural areas lack proper knowledge. | Among the main financial matters to be both actual and ambiguous for low financially literate adults, the experts diagnosed emergency fund and budgeting, investments, credits, access to grants and subsidies, work-related insurance and pensions, and the risk of financial fraud. |
2. Recommendations on enhancing financial literacy | This section contains recommendations to enable low financially literate adults living in rural areas to make sound financial decisions. | The main recommendations included taking organized courses, workshops, or training to acquire the necessary knowledge and skills. The proposed topics of learning activities were financial management, budgeting, pension and retirement plans, grant acquisition and management, investing in various financial instruments, and risk analysis. The importance of self-education was also highlighted. |
3. Obstacles to developing digital skills | In the section, experts discussed challenges/problems that low financially literate adults living in rural areas may encounter when trying to enhance their digital skills. | The experts pointed out different obstacles to developing digital skills, such as recipients’ low motivation to learn, insufficient previous backgrounds, and language barriers, as well as the lack of necessary equipment, limited access to infrastructure and technology, and scarcity of financing to bear education initiatives. Experts’ opinions were subject to the geographical distribution that the national context and the overall level of regional digital and infrastructure development can explain. |
4. Instruments for utilizing digital skills to improve financial literacy | This section focused on opportunities deriving from the enhancement of the digital skills for low financial literacy adults coming from rural areas | Experts stressed the crucial role of institutional support and digital channels in enhancing financial literacy, such as mobile applications, broadcasting and learning digital platforms, social media, virtual reality, and desktop software. They pointed out the emerging function of gamification, including virtual escape rooms and puzzles, in improving financial literacy. |
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Czech, K.; Ochnio, L.; Wielechowski, M.; Zabolotnyy, S. Financial Literacy: Identification of the Challenges, Needs, and Difficulties among Adults Living in Rural Areas. Agriculture 2024, 14, 1705. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14101705
Czech K, Ochnio L, Wielechowski M, Zabolotnyy S. Financial Literacy: Identification of the Challenges, Needs, and Difficulties among Adults Living in Rural Areas. Agriculture. 2024; 14(10):1705. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14101705
Chicago/Turabian StyleCzech, Katarzyna, Luiza Ochnio, Michał Wielechowski, and Serhiy Zabolotnyy. 2024. "Financial Literacy: Identification of the Challenges, Needs, and Difficulties among Adults Living in Rural Areas" Agriculture 14, no. 10: 1705. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14101705
APA StyleCzech, K., Ochnio, L., Wielechowski, M., & Zabolotnyy, S. (2024). Financial Literacy: Identification of the Challenges, Needs, and Difficulties among Adults Living in Rural Areas. Agriculture, 14(10), 1705. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14101705