FINANCIAL PLANNING CAN INCREASE EMPLOYEE PRODUCTIVITY


     Talk around the office water cooler often gravitates to one issue: money - and the lack of it.  And whom do employees most often blame for their financial woes?  Their employer.

     However, the real issue is often not what employees earn, but what they keep.  Many people don't know how to manage their money, how to spend it, how to save it.  That's where employers can step in.  By educating their employees and their families about how to better manage their money, employers can benefit their employees and the company in a number of ways:

     Educating employees about personal financial planning is not as ground breaking as it may appear.  Employers have made major efforts to educate employees about their personal health in order to reduce health-benefit costs.  Why not improve their financial health?  In fact, under federal guidelines that took effect January 1, 1994, employers with 401(k) plans are being advised to provide better investment alternatives and to better inform their employees about the plans.

     How do companies go about financially educating their employees?  They can put on financial planning seminars, offer individual sessions with qualified financial planners, or provide financial newsletters or other resource material.  These seminars and resource materials should teach employees the fundamentals about money management (budgeting, credit cards, banking, debt management), investing, insurance, retirement, and estate planning, and taxes.

     For a modest investment, employers will find that financially literate employees return big dividends.

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