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What Is Financial Literacy? The Real Skills That Build Wealth

Author: Nate Gregory
Published: Mar 24, 2026 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:

Financial literacy is understanding how money works - how to earn it, save it, invest it, and grow it.

Most of us were never taught any of this in school.

But it's the single most important skill for building long-term wealth.

Most of us grew up being taught the same thing:

  • Study hard. 
  • Get good grades. 
  • Get a good job. 

And once you're making good money, everything will be just fine.

But that's not the way it works.

There's a difference between earning a good paycheck and actually becoming financially successful. 

And that gap? That's where financial literacy comes in.

Financial literacy means you understand how our economic system works. More importantly, you understand how it can work for you.

Without financial literacy, you’ll never escape the rat race of making money just to live paycheck to paycheck.

And in the end? You’ll blame money for your problems.

But the reality is - money is just a tool. You need to know how to use it properly.

Let’s break down what financial literacy is, how you can use it to build wealth, and what happens if you live life without it.

Once you know how money works, you might be ready to build wealth.

How do you do that? Through investing.

Join our CEO Jaspreet Singh in April to discover easy strategies beginner investors can use to spot market shifts and potential investment opportunities in this free investor workshop.

What Is Financial Literacy?

Financial literacy is the ability to understand and use money effectively.

That means knowing how to earn, save, invest, and protect your money - and understanding the economic system you're operating in.

It's not about memorizing stock tickers or reading 10-K reports (although we have articles on that too).

It's about building a foundation so you can make smart decisions with the money you already have.

Here's the problem: We're not taught financial education. 

Most people's entire financial education growing up was "don't worry about money" - while watching their parents stress about money every day.

That disconnect is where the trouble starts.

Why Financial Literacy Matters for Investors

If you don't know what to do with the money you make, you will never have a chance to build any sort of wealth.

It doesn't matter how much money you earn. It doesn't matter who your parents are or where you live. Without financial literacy, more income just means more spending.

Let’s put this into perspective.

In the early 1970s, a single income could support a family - a home, two cars, a vacation, retirement savings, and college funds. 

Today, two-income households are struggling to cover even half of that list.

What changed? Inflation. 

The cost of everything goes up every year. But most people's financial knowledge stayed exactly the same, along with their paychecks.

Financial literacy closes that gap. It teaches you how to stop being only a consumer in the economy - and start becoming an investor and producer too.

The Core Pillars of Financial Literacy

Let's break down the skills that actually make up financial literacy.

1. Understanding How the Economic System Works

We live in a capitalist system. There are two ways to get paid in this system - through your labor (your job) and through your capital (your investments).

Most of us are only taught the labor side. Go to school, get a job, climb the corporate ladder.

But wealthy people focus on the capital side. They earn money from their investments - stocks, real estate, businesses - not just their paychecks.

The economy is made up of three groups: 

  • Businesses. 
  • Investors.
  • Consumers.

Everyone is a consumer - but the system is designed to benefit the investors and business owners the most.

Financial literacy teaches you how to shift from just being a consumer to also being a producer. That shift is the foundation of building wealth.

2. Building a Financial System

The average person's financial life looks like this - you make money, you spend money, and then you wonder where all your money went.

Wealthy people make money, invest first, and then spend whatever is left.

One simple framework is the 75-15-10 plan. 

For every dollar you earn:

  • 75 cents is the maximum you spend.
  • 15 cents is the minimum you invest.
  • 10 cents is the minimum you save.

If you're younger and willing to take on more risk, you might try a 50-30-20 plan - spending no more than 50%, investing at least 30%, and saving at least 20%.

The key is having a system. Without one, your money disappears. With one, your money starts working for you.

The nice thing here is this plan scales with you over time. If you earn more, you automatically save more, invest more, and spend more.

3. Saving Strategically

You will never save your way to wealth.

Why? Because of inflation

A thousand dollars had way more buying power 50 years ago than it does today. If you just keep piling cash into a savings account, your money is slowly losing value.

That doesn't mean saving is pointless. But you need to save strategically - for three specific reasons:

  • To protect yourself against emergencies.
  • To save for a big purchase.
  • To save money for an investment.

If you're not saving for one of those three reasons, you're saving the wrong way. 

The goal is to build a cushion - somewhere between three and 12 months of expenses depending on where you are in life - and then redirect that savings money into investments.

4. Understanding Investing Basics

Investing is where your money actually grows.

There's a limit to how much you can work. Everyone has to sleep, eat, and take breaks. 

But there's no limit to how much your money can work. Your money doesn't need breaks.

There are two main ways investors get paid:

  • Cash flow - regular payments from your investments (like dividends from stocks or rent from real estate)
  • Appreciation - the value of your investment going up over time

And there are two main ways to invest:

  • Passive investing - putting your money into funds like index funds or ETFs that track the broader market.
  • Active investing - researching and picking individual companies.

Most successful investors use a mix of both.

5. Knowing the Difference Between Trading and Investing

Trading and investing are not the same thing.

Trading means buying and selling on a short turnaround - days, weeks, maybe a month. It's about trying to catch quick price swings.

Investing means holding assets for the long term - months, years, even decades. It's about letting your money compound and grow.

Here's the reality - 97% of day traders lose money in the long run. 

It’s very difficult to predict what is going to happen in the market in the short term.

But over the long term, historically, the market has gone up.

When it comes to building wealth, three factors determine how successful you'll be - time, dollars, and return. 

Time is how long your money has to compound. 

Dollars is how much you're investing. 

Return is how fast it grows.

You can control your dollars and your strategy - but you can't get time back. That's why starting early matters so much.

6. Knowing Where to Invest

A financially literate investor understands the different places money can go:

  • Stocks - owning a piece of a public company.
  • Bonds - lending money to a government or company in exchange for interest payments.
  • Real estate - owning property that generates rental income or appreciates in value.
  • REITs - a way to invest in real estate without buying property directly.
  • Index funds and ETFs - baskets of stocks or bonds that give you instant diversification.
  • Alternative investments - things like precious metals and cryptocurrency.

Each has different levels of risk and reward. 

The point isn't to pick one - it's to understand your options so you can build a portfolio that matches your goals and risk tolerance.

7. Managing Debt the Right Way

Society has taught that all debt is bad - but that’s not true.

There are different types of debt.

Consumer debt - using borrowed money to buy things that don't pay you back, like clothes, vacations, and cars - keeps you broke. It's expensive, and it works against your financial goals.

But debt used to buy assets, like a rental property or a business, can actually help you build wealth if used wisely.

The financially literate move is to pay down high-interest consumer debt aggressively, avoid "buy now, pay later" traps, and understand what it actually means to afford something.

Here's a simple rule of thumb - if you can't buy five of them, you can't afford one of them. 

That applies to non-essentials. It's a quick gut-check before any purchase.

The Real Cost of Financial Illiteracy

You’re probably wondering, “if financial literacy is so important, then why aren’t we taught it growing up.”

Because the system benefits if you don’t understand money.

It's actually profitable to keep you financially uneducated. 

When you don't understand money, it's easier to keep you spending all of it - making everyone else rich while you keep paying your banker.

Poverty isn't just generational because of income. 

It's generational because of mindset. If you grew up hearing "we can't afford it" and "money is bad," those beliefs get passed down.

Financial literacy breaks that cycle.

It gives you the tools to stop wondering where your money went - and start putting your money to work. 

It shifts your thinking from "how do I earn more?" to "how do I make what I earn go further?"

How to Start Building Financial Literacy Today

This is your wake up call - yes, most of us were not taught how money works.

That’s not your fault - but from this moment onward, it’s your responsibility to change the role money plays in your life.

Here are a few action steps:

  • Create three bank accounts - one for spending, one for investing, and one for saving. This keeps your money separated and intentional.
  • Pick a financial system - whether it's 75-15-10 or 50-30-20, choose a framework and follow it.
  • Start learning about investing - understand the difference between stocks and bonds, active and passive investing, and how compound growth works.
  • Pay down high-interest debt - every dollar going to credit card interest is a dollar that could be invested.
  • Set a savings goal - figure out how many months of expenses you need saved, hit that number, and then redirect your savings into investments.

Building wealth is a long-term game. It's a lifestyle that requires you to change your mindset. 

But every financially literate decision you make today compounds into real wealth over time.

Because if you don’t learn the rules of money today, money will end up ruling you.

Want to learn how the pros stay ahead of the market?

Join our CEO Jaspreet Singh in April to learn how to spot market shifts and potential investment opportunities in a free investor workshop.

Click here to register for free.


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