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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
August 11, 2003
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Kristy Thomas
(703) 683-5004 ext. 136

Rosetta Jones
(704) 444-3815

Visa USA’s Back-to-School Budget Calculator Helps Students Become Sharp Money Managers 

New Tips, Interactive Calculator on ‘Practical Money Skills’ Site

San Francisco - August 11, 2003 - Visa USA today announced the addition of a useful new resource to its award-winning financial education site, www.practicalmoneyskills.com. The Back-to-School Budget Calculator is designed to help families create a financial plan for back-to-school shopping. This free resource uses an interactive worksheet to help anticipate the many school supplies students of all ages will need before they head back to class this fall. 

“The calculator transforms back-to-school shopping into a valuable budgeting lesson that requires careful planning and educated purchase decisions,” said Rosetta Jones, director, Visa USA. “At Visa, we believe that reinforcing the basics of money management, at school and at home, is the best way to teach youth -- and there is no better teacher than experience.

“Whether preparing to send your kindergartner to his or her first day of school, or your teen away to college, the calculator will help parents financially prepare themselves and their children to better manage their back-to-school expenses,” added Jones.

The calculator equips families with a smart budget by ensuring they consider all of their back-to-school expenses, and allows for any needed adjustments. In addition, parents and students will find ten helpful tips for a more educational back-to-school shopping experience: 

TEN ‘BACK-TO-SCHOOL’ BUDGETING TIPS:

  1. Children and parents should set a realistic back-to-school budget together with the help of the Back-to-School Budget Calculator.
  2. Use back-to-school shopping as a budgeting lesson and have kids prepare a budget with you.
  3. Encourage kids to consider ways to manage cash flow, like clipping coupons, looking for sales early, or buying supplies quarterly or by semester.
  4. Encourage children to follow the budget spending limit. Stress that getting one more expensive item might mean sacrificing something else.
  5. Take a printed copy of your estimated budget with you when shopping and have your child enter in all of the actual expenses.
  6. Teach your kids to comparison shop to avoid impulse buying or paying for overpriced items. Deter them from buying something on the first visit to the store, but rather have them shop around and take time to consider the purchase.
  7. Differentiate between "needs" and "wants." Encourage children to contribute their own money to fill the gap between what they "need" and what they "want.”
  8. Develop a savings account or piggy bank, and tell kids that if they are under the budget limit, what they save now can be put into the savings account for a new toy or CD later.
  9. Continue the back-to-school budgeting lesson by starting kids with a monthly budget saved on their computer or in a notebook.
  10. If your kids have a checking account, encourage them to keep up all cash, card, or check deductions in their checkbook register. Also remind them to balance the register when the statement arrives.
Practical Money Skills for Life is an online curriculum (www.practicalmoneyskills.com), sponsored by Visa and is free to consumers. It features lesson plans, interactive calculators, and activities for parents, teachers, students, and consumers of all ages. 

Additional components of Visa’s ongoing campaign to enhance personal financial literacy:
  • In an effort to increase the financial literacy of America’s youth, Visa is sponsoring the second annual Practical Money Skills for Life Educator Challenge. This contest will award teachers who creatively incorporate money management education in the classroom. Registration begins this summer for the 2003-04 school year, and last year winners are posted on www.practicalmoneyskills.com.
  • Visa’s Practical Money Skills for Life program (www.practicalmoneyskills.com) was developed by teachers for teachers. Working with our partners: Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy, the National Consumers League, Lightspan.com, U.S. News and World Report Classroom Program, U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators, this cutting-edge Internet-based personal finance curriculum reaches more than 100,000 schools and 37 million students. These financial literacy tools are available in English and Spanish. 
  • In addition to providing a free personal finance curriculum, Visa USA continues its efforts to bridge the digital divide by donating computer equipment to schools in need and providing training for teachers. During 2003, Visa will continue this program by donating computer labs to 10 high schools across the United States. To date, Visa has donated nearly 40 computer labs nationwide.
  • Beyond a focus on educating high school students to be smart money managers, Visa USA has also partnered with the Reserve Officers Association to make available Practical Money Skills for Life resources to military families at installations across the United States.

For more information on the Back-to-School Budget Calculator or the award-winning Practical Money Skills for Life curriculum, please go to www.practicalmoneyskills.com.

About Practical Money Skills for Life 
The Practical Money Skills for Life curriculum is teacher tested and teacher approved. At the 2001 National Education Association Expo, the program was put before teachers to evaluate and grade. Nearly 100 percent of teachers who reviewed the site said they approve of the Practical Money Skills for Life program; 98 percent said they would recommend the site to other educators, and 94 percent gave the program a "B" or better. The curriculum currently reaches 2.5 million teachers, 37 million students, and 100,000 schools. Additionally, this program won the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators 2002 Achievement in Consumer Education Award (ACE) for the best innovative program for the private sector and was named an “Honorable Mention” by the Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy’s 2002 Soaring$tar Award.

About Visa 
Visa is the world’s leading payment brand and largest consumer payment system, enabling banks to provide their consumer and merchant customers with a wide variety of payment alternatives. Nearly 21,000 financial institutions worldwide rely on Visa’s processing system, VisaNet, to facilitate $2.5 trillion in annual transaction volume with virtually 100 percent reliability. Consumers in more than 150 countries carry more than one billion Visa-branded cards, accepted at millions of locations worldwide. Within the U.S., nearly 14,000 financial institutions issue 396 million Visa cards, accounting for more than $1 trillion in annual transaction volume. Visa offers a trusted, reliable and convenient way to access and mobilize financial resources - anytime, anywhere, anyway. For more information about Visa, please visit www.visa.com. 

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