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CNBC

CNBC | SurveyMonkey Your Money International Financial Security Survey

CNBC | SurveyMonkey Your Money International Financial Security Survey

Key findings:

  • At least half of adults globally are stressed about personal finances, with inflation as the leading financial stressor among adults.
  • Many adults feel financially worse off than their parents, and parents are similarly pessimistic about their children’s future financial prospects.
  • Concerns over retirement are widespread, with half of adults globally report falling behind schedule on retirement planning and savings. A majority of adults anticipate relying on the government to some extent during retirement.

More adults point to inflation as a source of their financial stress than any other contributor, including lack of savings, economy-wide instability, aging, and rising interest rates. Six in ten or more adults in the US (65%), Australia (62%), France (62%), and Germany (66%), and around half in Singapore (46%), Mexico (56%), the UK (51%), Spain (55%), and Switzerland (48%) cite rising prices as a contributing factor of financial stress.

  • A lack of savings is also a leading cause of financial stress for all countries except for France.
  • Economy-wide stability is a top source of financial stress for all countries except for Australia, Singapore, and Switzerland.
  • Stress from medical or healthcare bills are a leading contributor of financial stress for adults in Singapore (33%), France (28%), and Switzerland (37%).

Seven in ten adults in the US (70%), Mexico (73%), Australia (70%), and Spain (72%) say they are ‘very or somewhat stressed’ about their personal finances. Only 49% of adults in Singapore report the same level of stress, while Spain’s northern neighbors experience varying degrees of personal financial stress:

  • 63% of adults in the UK say they are stressed about their personal finances.
  • 57% of adults in Germany and 55% in Switzerland are stressed about their personal finances.
  • France sees the lowest percentage of adults reporting financial stress, with only 48% saying they are ‘very or somewhat stressed’.

Nearly half of adults in Mexico (47%) and Singapore (49%) say their financial situation is better off now than five years ago, nearly twice the amount of those who say they are worse off (20% and 25%, respectively). Adults in all other countries who report a decline in their financial situation over the past 5 years outnumber those who report an improvement:

  • Half of adults in Australia (51%), Germany (51%), and the UK (51%) say that their financial situation is worse off now compared with 5 years ago, compared to three in ten or fewer who report an improvement (29% in Australia, 25% in Germany, and 27% in the UK).
  • Slightly less than half of adults in the US (45%), France (42%), and Switzerland (44%) say that their financial situation is worse off now compared with 5 years ago.

Economic optimism also trends similarly across countries: the majority of adults in Mexico (74%) and Singapore (79%) are ‘very or somewhat optimistic’ about where their country’s economy is heading. Switzerland is the only European country surveyed where the majority are optimistic, at 57%. Nearly two in three adults in the UK (63%), Spain (64%), France (62%), and Germany (66%) are ‘very or somewhat pessimistic’ about their country’s economic prospects. Adults in the US are split in their optimism (49% are optimistic, 51% are pessimistic).

The US, Mexico, and Singapore are the sole countries with the majority of parents expressing optimism toward their children’s financial futures:

  • 75% of parents in Mexico feel their children will be financially better off than they are, compared with 59% in the US and 57% of parents in Singapore.
  • Parents in the UK who think their children will be better off (45%) outnumber the percentage of parents who think their children will be worse off (29%) or about the same (25%).
  • Optimism is lowest among parents in Spain and France:
    • 43% of parents in France think their children will be worse off than they are, while only 27% think they will be better off, and 29% think they will be financially similar.
    • 42% of parents in Spain think their children will be worse off than they are, compared to 32% who think they will be better off, and 26% who think they will be at the same level financially.
  • While Switzerland and Germany see a higher percentage of parents expecting their kids to be financially better off than worse off (39% and 29% for Switzerland, 39% and 28% for Germany), about one in three in both countries (32% for Switzerland, 33% for Germany) expect their children to be financially similar to them.

Parents across all countries except for those in Mexico view their children obtaining a secure job as the most important factor in ensuring financial success, ahead of having a fully-funded education, inheritance, free housing, companionship, and estate planning.

  • Half of parents in Australia (50%), the UK (49%), Spain (55%), France (47%), and Germany (51%) view having job security as most impactful on their children’s financial success.
  • Four in ten parents in the US (43%), Singapore (42%), and Switzerland (43%) view their children’s career stability as the most important factor in their financial success.
  • 30% of parents in Mexico point to having a secure job as the leading contributor to their children's future financial success, tied with having a fully-funded education (31%).

Read more about our polling methodology here
Click through all the results in the interactive toplines below: