A Reddit discussion went viral recently, exposing a financial blind spot among Gen Z and millennials: many don't grasp that credit card interest compounds monthly if you carry a balance. They assume it's basic knowledge, but nobody ever actually taught them. The gap between what seems obvious and what people actually understand about debt mechanics is surprisingly wide. Turns out, financial literacy isn't instinctive—it's learned. And plenty of people are learning it the hard way.

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OnchainArchaeologistvip
· 9h ago
Damn, that's why my friend's monthly bills are screaming... No one taught us.
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BoredWatchervip
· 9h ago
Oh my God, this is me. Only after maxing out my credit card did I understand the power of monthly compound interest... A painful lesson.
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GasFeeNightmarevip
· 9h ago
Damn, I really only understand after being screwed over by this thing—it's a painful lesson.
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MetaverseVagabondvip
· 9h ago
Bro, isn't this exactly the common problem we faced in the early days of Web3... We really have no clue about leverage, compound interest, and capital costs.
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MEVHunterWangvip
· 9h ago
The discussion that went viral on ngl really hit the pain points of Gen Z... Schools really didn't teach about compound interest. It seems like everyone only understands after being caught in credit card traps. I am too.
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