Rositsa Vartonik, Financial Literacy Initiative, on Bulgarian National Radio: Financial literacy is an essential skill for a successful life

Financial literacy means managing resources and money in a way that allows us to live the life we envision. Financial literacy and financial education are of growing importance in today’s society, stated Rositsa Vartonik, Founder of the Financial Literacy Initiative Foundation, in a discussion on BNR – Hristo Botev with James Yolovski, finance lecturer at VUZF, and Magdalena Delinesheva, Chair of the Board of the Education 5.0 Foundation, hosted by Nina Tsaneva on the programme Our Day.

Financial literacy and financial education are recognised as important individual skills necessary for making sustainable financial decisions and achieving financial well-being. This is driven by the availability of increasingly complex financial products, the emergence of new risks, and the rapid development of the financial sector.

In Bulgaria, the National Strategy for Financial Literacy and its accompanying Action Plan are being implemented. Their aim is to fill the gap the country has in this type of education.

Assoc. Prof. Dr James Yolovski, Chief Expert at the Fiscal Council of Bulgaria and lecturer at the Higher School of Insurance and Finance, commented on air during Our Day that financial literacy is, in a sense, a mission for the Interinstitutional Working Group at the Ministry of Finance. He noted that the Action Plan is currently being implemented and that last year a financial competence framework for adults was developed, which can also be used within the school system.

Rositsa Vartonik, Founder and Director of the Financial Literacy Initiative Foundation, shared that financial literacy means managing resources and money so that we can live the life we imagine. She also emphasised the importance of the National Strategy for Financial Literacy and the role of the Ministry of Finance in organising and leading this process.

During the programme, Dr Magdalena Delinesheva, Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Education 5.0 Foundation, expressed the need for financial literacy to be meaningfully integrated into the education system. She noted that there is currently a lack of good practice in this area and that financial literacy is not part of compulsory curricula. Although there are fragmented topics and concepts related to it—mainly within technology and entrepreneurship programmes—this is insufficient.

In conclusion, financial literacy and financial education are of growing importance in today’s society. To achieve purposeful development of financial literacy, cooperation between government, educational institutions, foundations, and the business sector is essential.

Listen to the full discussion!