SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The average American household consumer credit card debt is about eight thousand dollars ($8,000).
(b) Forty-three percent of American families spend more than they earn, and data from the Federal Reserve states that Americans hold a total debt of $1.9773 trillion, not including mortgage debt, averaging eighteen thousand six hundred fifty-four dollars ($18,654) per household.
(c) High school seniors taking part in a national survey of financial knowledge scored an average of 52.4 percent, which is a failing grade.
(d) Undergraduate students reported their freshman year as the most prevalent time for obtaining credit cards, with 56 percent reporting that they obtained their first credit card at 18 years of age.
(e) Almost 24 percent of undergraduate students reported using credit cards for tuition.
(f) Studies have shown that young adults who are 18 to 24 years of age suffer higher rates of theft of their personal financial information than any other age group.
(g) Many groups are dedicated to increasing the financial literacy of Americans and a broad range of quality personal finance instructional materials and curricula have been created for this purpose.
(h) California does not have an official statewide policy or educational plan for the teaching of financial literacy.
(i) Financial literacy materials and resources exist in many forms but are not organized or collected in a systematic manner.
(j) The teaching of financial literacy skills is vital to equip the young people of California with the tools they need to enter the financial marketplace.