A growing crop of teens is proving financial literacy can be cool — and they might know more than you.
More than 20,000 high-school students from across the US competed in the 15th annual National Personal Finance Challenge, hosted by the Council for Economic Education, with 37 teams from 33 states advancing to the finals held Monday in New York. A four-person team from Mount Hebron High School in Ellicott City, Maryland, took the top prize, correctly answering 15 of 20 open-ended questions on topics ranging from retirement accounts to stock market mechanics.
"The level of preparation we saw this year was remarkable — these students are mastering concepts that many adults struggle with," said Nan Morrison, president and chief executive officer of the Council for Economic Education, which organizes the competition. "Financial literacy is no longer an elective skill; it's a fundamental life competency."
The finals tested students on financial terms many of them aren't old enough to use. Questions covered the Magnificent Seven tech stocks, the difference between Roth and Traditional IRAs, Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, credit utilization ratios, and the debt avalanche method of repayment. Other topics included the Efficient Market Hypothesis, bid-ask spreads, gap insurance, the Federal Open Market Committee's membership structure, and the implications of a downward-sloping yield curve.
Why Financial Literacy Matters Now
The competition comes as more US states mandate personal finance education in high schools. According to the Council for Economic Education's biennial survey, 28 states now require students to take a personal finance course before graduation, up from 21 in 2022. That shift is producing a generation of teens who can analyze compound interest, evaluate insurance products, and understand the tax implications of different retirement accounts — skills that historically weren't taught until adulthood, if at all.
The quiz questions published by the Wall Street Journal from this year's finals highlight the gap between what teens are learning and what the general public knows. Topics such as the FOMC's 12 voting members, the mechanics of gap insurance for underwater auto loans, and the signaling power of an inverted yield curve are concepts that trip up many adult investors.
What the Quiz Reveals About Knowledge Gaps
The 10-question sample from the finals covers five core personal finance domains: investing (Magnificent Seven, Efficient Market Hypothesis, bid-ask spreads), retirement planning (Roth vs. Traditional IRA withdrawal rules), credit management (utilization ratios, debt repayment strategies), insurance (gap coverage), and macroeconomics (TIPS, yield curves, FOMC composition). Each domain represents a real-world financial decision that Americans face regularly — from choosing a 401(k) to financing a car to interpreting bond market signals.
For context, the Federal Reserve's 2024 Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking found that only 48 percent of US adults could correctly answer four of six basic financial literacy questions. The National Personal Finance Challenge's winning team scored 75 percent on questions significantly harder than those in the Fed survey.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.