Life Insurance and women in the uk. Page 2
It's too easy to brand young people as apathetic just because they haven't got pensions or life insurance. Smug thirty-somethings who received full grants, graduated in a less competitive market and bought property when the house market was low are quite happy to "tut tut" at their twenty-something shadows in their lack of financially savvy experience, but today's twenty somethings are being squeezed from all angles:
* Student loans replace university grants
* Commercialisation of university life, with banks and credit card companies actively courting student customers
* High property prices
* Very competitive job market
What we need are comprehensive financial research sites that provide information which directly relates to our circumstances. Websites such as moneynet ( http://www.moneynet.co.uk ) with their product price comparisons and finance guides (especially the student finance guide) -do go most of the way, but we want something that also takes into account our aspirations, situations and will go the distance. We're not ( mortgages ) adverse to pensions, life insurance and mortgages, but if we're going to splash out lots of dough, it has to be a reasonably reliable investment and we remain unconvinced from we've seen so far in provocative, panic-stirring media.
It's true that products such as life insurance would at least protect our ( secured loans ) families from our debts and that's important, but with regard to pension, who's to say that in our old age, we may not revert back to student lifestyles - living in communities and on budgets.
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