Find out what people on the street say are
the financial challenges women face and how they can deal with them.
Not exact matches
A new Merrill Lynch study conducted in partnership with Age Wave, «
Women and Financial Wellness: Beyond the Bottom Line,» celebrates the progress made by women while examining the financial challenges women still face throughout their lives, and offers potential solut
Women and
Financial Wellness: Beyond the Bottom Line,» celebrates the progress made by women while examining the financial challenges women still face throughout their lives, and offers potential s
Financial Wellness: Beyond the Bottom Line,» celebrates the progress made by
women while examining the financial challenges women still face throughout their lives, and offers potential solut
women while examining the
financial challenges women still face throughout their lives, and offers potential s
financial challenges women still face throughout their lives, and offers potential solut
women still
face throughout their lives, and offers potential solutions.
The training teaches bankers about the opportunities and
challenges female
financial decision makers
face so
women business owners like Philp can develop the partnerships they need.
We developed this toolkit because
women face unique
financial challenges such as having less super than men, living longer and taking time out of paid work to care for others.
Many Canadian
women wish they were more confident in
financial matters, and many
women face unique
challenges when it comes to debt and finances.
«Millennials, and more specifically millennial
women, continue to
face unique
financial challenges.
As you can tell by its title, it doesn't hide the fact that it's geared toward the unique
financial challenges faced by
women, and that really makes it stand out against a seemingly - endless wave of other
financial podcasts.
We understand the
financial challenges that working
women face and we're ready to help.
We offer resources, planning articles and investment insights specifically geared toward the unique
financial challenges and life transitions that
women face.
Despite the significant impact of maternal depression on mothers and children alike, maternal mental health needs are often neglected or undiagnosed.18 Prevalence rates of maternal depression are high among low - income
women due to the greater
challenges they may
face related to
financial hardships, low levels of community or familial support, and societal prejudice.19 In fact, the prevalence of maternal depression among low - income
women in the United States is double the prevalence rate for all U.S.
women.20 At the same time, these
women are less likely to receive treatment or be screened for postpartum depression.21 Studies show there are clear racial and ethnic disparities in who accesses treatment in the United States, even among
women of the same general socio - economic status: In a multiethnic cohort of lower - income Medicaid recipients, 9 percent of white
women sought treatment, compared with 4 percent of African American
women and 5 percent of Latinas.22