Financial literacy in schools

They Never Taught Your Kids Money on Purpose — Now the Bill Is Due

EDITOR'S NOTES

For decades, American kids graduated knowing trigonometry but not taxes, credit, or how debt really works. Now, suddenly, states are rushing to mandate financial literacy courses. This article breaks down what’s changing, why it took so long, and who benefited from keeping everyday Americans in the dark. The answer isn’t comfortable—but it’s necessary.

A Long-Overdue Awakening in American Schools

Across the country, high schools are finally admitting what parents have known for years: kids were never taught how money actually works.

By 2031, nearly three-quarters of public high school students will be required to take a personal finance course to graduate. That’s a massive jump from just 11% in 2023. On paper, it sounds like progress. And it is. But it also raises an unavoidable question.

Why now?

If financial literacy is so essential, why did generations of Americans leave school unprepared to handle debt, taxes, investing, or even basic budgeting?

The System Worked — Just Not for You

Let’s be honest. The old system didn’t fail. It functioned exactly as designed.

A population that doesn’t understand compound interest, inflation, or credit is easier to manage. Easier to sell debt to. Easier to keep dependent.

While public schools avoided money education, elite families quietly taught it at home. Private schools with endowments taught investing, asset management, and tax strategy as a matter of course. Meanwhile, working families were told their kids should “just focus on getting into college.”

That wasn’t accidental. That was an advantage—carefully protected.

What the New Financial Literacy Push Gets Right

There’s real value in what some schools are now doing.

Students are:

  • Learning how saving and investing actually work
  • Managing mock or real investment portfolios
  • Studying taxes and even earning IRS certification
  • Learning about insurance, loans, and long-term planning

This is practical knowledge. This is life knowledge. And it should have been taught decades ago.

Hands-on experience beats theory every time. When students see how money grows—or disappears—they start thinking differently. They ask better questions. They make smarter choices.

That’s a good thing.

What the Headlines Won’t Say

Here’s what the polite coverage leaves out.

Teaching financial literacy creates independent thinkers. And independent thinkers don’t blindly trust institutions.

Once kids understand:

  • How debt compounds
  • How inflation erodes savings
  • How taxes really work
  • How banks profit from confusion

They start noticing patterns. They start questioning narratives. And they start realizing the game has rules most people were never shown.

That kind of awareness doesn’t serve entrenched interests. It never has.

Why This Knowledge Was Kept Out of Classrooms

For decades, schools prioritized compliance over independence.

They taught:

  • Test-taking
  • Credential-chasing
  • Rule-following

They avoided:

  • Ownership
  • Risk
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Financial sovereignty

Because a citizen who understands money is harder to control. Harder to trap. Harder to distract.

That’s the uncomfortable truth.

This Is Progress — And an Indictment

Yes, the expansion of financial literacy is good news. It will help millions of young Americans avoid mistakes that haunted their parents.

But don’t miss the bigger picture.

America didn’t forget to teach finance.
It chose not to.

And now, as debt explodes, trust collapses, and families feel squeezed from every direction, the system is scrambling to fix what never should have been broken.

The question isn’t whether kids should learn money skills.
The question is why it took a crisis to allow it.

What You Can Do Right Now

You don’t need to wait for the school system to catch up.

If you want to take real steps to protect yourself and your family, start here:

Join the Inner Circle — normally $39.95, now just $19.95/month

Knowledge is power.
And they don’t give it away unless they have to.