Ouchie-Z-Clown
I'm better than Mulli!
Yes financial wellness is one of the latest buzzwords in the industry. I say that because all employers are interested in providing these services to their employees, but not interested in paying for it. So they learn about it and rarely move forward with providing it. This despite the increasingly growing need for it in a largely financially illiterate workforce.There's a company in San Francisco called Zen Benefits that's trying to do just that. The CEO is Jay Fulcher, i went to HS with him he was a senior when I was a freshman we both played basketball. I don't think I've seen him since I was 16 years old so over 30 years.
If you read about him he's saying the exact same stuff, companies need to invest in their employees's health both medical health and financial health. The cost of constantly replacing unhappy employees far exceeds what they think they are saving by NOT doing it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zenefits
And there’s another side to the equation too . . . employees not retiring and working later into their lives. They tend to have higher salaries than younger replacements and their impact to companies health insurance plans increases exponentially. Most companies are short-sighted when it comes to the impact (positive) that retirement can have in their bottom line.