Half of Australians feel weekly financial stress

financial wellbeing confidence advice

2 December 2022
| By Rhea Nath |
image
image
expand image

Most Australians are worried about how the current economic climate will affect their household budgets with half saying they feel financial stress at least once a week or more, according to research.

A YouGov survey of over 2,000 Australians, commissioned by Australian Retirement Trust (ART), found recent economic events and rising cost of living pressures were causing massive financial stress. 

Concerningly, one in six (16%) said they feel financially stressed every day. A third (33%) were concerned they did not have enough superannuation or savings for retirement.

"It’s good for people to be thinking about their finances – but not if it is causing stress and worry at such a high rate. That’s something that, as an industry, we should be helping to solve,” Anne Fuchs, ART’s head of advice, said.

While only 32% of the participants admitted they accessed financial advice in some capacity, 70% believed it could improve their financial wellbeing. 

An overwhelming 96% said there were barriers to accessing financial advice while over half (57%) admitted it was simply too expensive. 

“As the survey shows, Australians know financial advice can make a difference to their wellbeing, and they want to access it. But if the vast majority face barriers, it signals that there is a problem with the system. Advice isn’t just for the wealthy, it can improve financial outcomes no matter what you earn, and everyone should have the opportunity to access it,” Fuchs elaborated. 

“Difficult economic times aren’t going away – we have seen seven interest rate rises in a row, with many economists forecasting more to come. Australians shouldn’t be left to manage that stress on their own and financial advice can help ease that worry.”

She noted that “financial advice should be easy to get and easy to understand” and this could be accomplished with a regulatory environment that enables that. 

All eyes were on the Quality of Advice review, which would be submitted to Government on 16 December. 

According to Bernard Reilly, ART chief executive, added: "We need to break down the barriers Australians face in getting financial advice, so we support the Quality of Advice Review. It’s challenging the industry to think differently about how advice can be delivered by super funds.”

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

This verdict highlights something deeply wrong and rotten at the heart of the FSCP. We are witnessing a heavy-handed, op...

5 hours ago

Interesting. Would be good to know the details of the StrategyOne deal....

4 days 10 hours ago

It’s astonishing to see the FAAA now pushing for more advisers by courting "career changers" and international recruits,...

3 weeks 2 days ago

Insignia Financial has made four appointments, including three who have joined from TAL, to lead strategy and innovation in its retirement solutions for the MLC brand....

2 weeks 4 days ago

A former Brisbane financial adviser has been charged with 26 counts of dishonest conduct regarding a failure to disclose he would receive substantial commission payments ...

3 days 8 hours ago

Pinnacle Investment Management has announced it will acquire strategic interests in two international fund managers for $142 million....

2 days 11 hours ago