Take the quiz as you go through the story. The answers are in the footnotes.
A bit of financial advice: When you go out to dinner with a Norwegian, a Swede or a Dane, let them calculate the tip. While you're at it, get them to look over the rest of your bills.
More than 70% of those cold-weather creatures understand basic financial concepts, according to Standard & Poor's Rating Services' Global Financial Literacy Survey, released today. The survey used four questions to test basic numeracy and understanding of interest compounding, inflation, and risk diversification.
Take the quiz as you go through the story. The answers are in the footnotes. Three out of four right (Questions 4 and 5 count as one) means you're financially literate. No pressure.
Other highlights of the survey:
• The U.S. lags behind other major English-speaking economies in its percentage of financially literate citizens. Citizens of Canada and the United Kingdom beat the U.S. by a wide margin.
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Question 1: Suppose you need to borrow $100. Which is the lower amount to pay back: $105 or $100 plus 3%?
• In major emerging economies, it's the 15- to 35-year-old demographic that shows the highest percentage of financial literacy. In major advanced economies, that distinction goes to the 36- to 50-year-old crowd.
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Question 2: Suppose over the next 10 years the prices of the things you buy double. If your income also doubles, will you be able to buy less than you can buy today, the same as you can buy today, or more than you can buy today?
• People just don't get risk diversification. Only 35% of respondents around the world got the right answer to Question 3 below.
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Question 3: Suppose you have some money. Is it safer to put your money into one business or investment, or to put your money into multiple businesses or investments?
• Many homeowners can't calculate the basic interest owed on their loan payments. About a third of adults in the U.S. have an outstanding housing loan; three in 10 don't understand how their debt accumulates.
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Question 4: Suppose you put money in the bank for two years and the bank agrees to add 15% per year to your account. Will the bank add more money to your account the second year than it did the first year, or will it add the same amount of money both years?
Question 5: Suppose you had $100 in a savings account and the bank adds 10% per year to the account. How much money would you have in the account after five years if you did not remove any money from the account?
Answers:
(1) $100 plus 3%.
(2) The same.
(3) Multiple businesses or investments.
(4) More.
(5) More than $150 [the other choices being exactly $150, less than $150, and don't know].