The money taboo is gradually disappearing from households, but the quality of transmission is not always keeping pace. A recent study carried out by Allianz France with Ifop highlights the fact that the family circle remains the main arena for economic learning for over three-quarters of the population. Communication is becoming more fluid, particularly among the younger generations , where the majority discuss these subjects without difficulty with their nearest and dearest. However, the qualitative picture is mixed: barely half of all individuals consider that the financial baggage they received in their youth is sufficient to cope with economic reality.
The reign of immediate prudence
An analysis of the content of this informal learning reveals that it is almost exclusively limited to a rationale of short-term security. The lessons given at home, very often by mothers who play a leading role in this education, focus on the basics: building up security savings, keeping a monthly budget or deciphering a payslip.
This approach creates a lasting behavioral foundation, but it also generates a massive blind spot when it comes to capital enhancement. Indeed, less than a quarter of those surveyed had received a real introduction to the mechanics of taxation, investment strategies or retirement structuring. The need for education on these specific topics is far greater than what has actually been conveyed.
The great leap into uncontrolled investing
This is where a real paradox emerges for wealth management professionals. Lack of financial culture does not act as a brake on taking the plunge. More than half of savers (57%) no longer hesitate to invest their cash in more sophisticated financial vehicles than the traditional regulated passbook accounts.
However, faced with the complexity of financial markets, the technicalities of life insurance and the continuing erosion of guaranteed returns, these investors are often navigating at a loss. They commit to long-term decisions without the necessary frame of reference to assess risks, arbitrate between different asset classes or anticipate economic shocks.
The cost of ignorance: an inequality machine
Beyond individual behavior, this lack of education acts as a powerful driver of social and wealth inequalities. The cost of not mastering financial levers is extremely high. Previous data have already shown that a solid economic culture can generate an estimated additional annual income of over 2,700 euros. Over a thirty-year investment horizon, the difference in capitalization between a well-informed investor and a layman can approach a quarter of a million euros.
At a time when pension schemes are imposing increasing individual responsibility, this asymmetry of information reinforces the primary mission of Wealth Management players: to transform this culture of simple prudence into a genuine strategy of performance and enlightened transmission.
Source :
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Ifop / Allianz France survey conducted in April 2026 among a representative sample of 1003 people).