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Building financial wellbeing at scale: six pilots for children and working-age adults

Zoe Renton, policy manager, Money and Pensions Service

Policy managers Zoe Renton and David Marjoribanks share six pilots funded by the Money and Pensions Service (MaPS) to test scalable ways to build financial wellbeing.

Children and Young People Pathfinders: testing the delivery of financial education at scale

Our £1.8m Children and Young People (CYP) Pathfinder programme tests the delivery of financial education at scale across the UK.

Each of the pathfinders focuses on addressing unmet need and using financial education approaches that are known to improve children and young people’s money skills, knowledge and behaviours. Findings will support the delivery of the UK Strategy for Financial Wellbeing goal to ensure two million more children and young people receive a meaningful financial education, by providing potential models for scaling-up delivery at home, in schools and in the community.

1. Preparing 16-17 year olds in England for independent living

This pathfinder is testing the delivery at scale of financial education workshops to help at least 10,000 young people prepare for independence. We will test a variety of delivery routes – expert-led, trainer-led and teacher-led learning in schools and non-school settings – to achieve specific financial capability outcomes. The pathfinder is being delivered by a consortium of organisations led by MyBnk, including Young Money, The Money Charity, Royal Association for the Deaf, Learn By Design and Trust Impact.

2. Supporting parents to teach their children about money in Northern Ireland and Scotland

Building on the successful pilot of Talk, Learn Do in Wales, these pathfinders are testing how we can ensure parents and carers are able to teach their own children about money. The pathfinder will deliver Talk Learn Do training to at least 500 practitioners, giving them the tools they need to build financial education into the support they already offer parents. In Northern Ireland, the pathfinder is being delivered by Reed in Partnership and IFF Research. Campaign for Learning is leading a consortium to deliver the pathfinder in Scotland, with Children in Scotland, One Parent Family and Scotcen.

3. Giving teachers in Wales the confidence and skills to deliver high-quality financial education

This pathfinder is testing the delivery of financial education teacher training, both face-to-face and e-learning. The programme will help teachers to strengthen the financial education they offer and to identify how learning about money can help children and young people achieve in the context of the new Curriculum for Wales. Delivered by Young Money in partnership with local authority consortia, the work will seek to embed financial education training and resources within regional school improvement and teacher professional learning systems.  

The Covid-19 pandemic, and associated school and other service closures, have led to some changes to the delivery of the pathfinders. However, we continue to work with partners to ensure we reach children, young people, parents and teachers when they need us most, and to test the effectiveness of these financial education programmes at scale.

The pathfinders will be delivered until Summer 2021, with the publication of evaluation reports later that year.

To find out more about the CYP Pathfinders, or MaPS’ wider work to improve the provision of financial education, please get in touch at cyp@maps.org.uk.

Working Age Savings and Credit Pathfinders

MaPS’ Working Age Savings and Credit Pathfinder Programme set out to build the evidence for how to help the 11.1 million working-age people in the ‘financially struggling’ and ‘financially squeezed’ segments who don’t save regularly, and the 9 million people who use credit to buy everyday essentials.

Based on the best available evidence – including an academic evidence review – and through extensive consultation with stakeholders in late 2018 and early 2019, we developed an outcomes-based commissioning model. Our intention was to test potentially scalable ways of embedding financial wellbeing support for target groups within existing support systems, focused on two outcomes: helping people build an emergency savings buffer and helping people to manage credit use and reduce reliance on credit for everyday essentials.

We sought to test three models intended to achieve these outcomes:

We made available funding for 12 pilots, each up to £100k, to co-design and test these models across the UK, with each of the three models tested in each part of the UK.

4. Youth Checkpoints

5. Money Supporters

6. Local Community Partnerships

We also funded a programme evaluation to help us understand and learn from the process of setting up, co-designing, delivering and adapting these projects, and the challenges, success factors and potential scalability, so as to inform future and larger-scale commissioning planning.


Explore our findings in the Savings and Credit Pathfinder Programme evaluation report. Stay up to date with MaPS news on Twitter and LinkedIn, and sign up for our monthly newsletter.

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