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Financial socialization of first-year college students: the roles of parents, work, and education. | LitMetric

Financial socialization of first-year college students: the roles of parents, work, and education.

J Youth Adolesc

Norton School of Family and Consumer Sciences, The University of Arizona, 650 N. Park Avenue, McClelland Park, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.

Published: December 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how adolescents' financial socialization impacts their financial knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors as young adults, focusing on a sample of 2,098 diverse first-year college students.
  • Key findings reveal that parental influence during adolescence has a stronger effect on young adults' financial outcomes than work experience or high school financial education.
  • The research supports a four-level model of financial socialization that links early socialization to learning, which in turn shapes attitudes and behaviors, offering insights for parents, educators, and students.

Article Abstract

This cross-sectional study tests a conceptual financial socialization process model, specifying four-levels that connect anticipatory socialization during adolescence to young adults' current financial learning, to their financial attitudes, and to their financial behavior. A total of 2,098 first-year college students (61.9% females) participated in the survey, representing a diverse ethnic group (32.6% minority participation: Hispanic 14.9%, Asian/Asian American 9%, Black 3.4%, Native American 1.8% and other 3.5%). Structural equation modeling indicated that parents, work, and high school financial education during adolescence predicted young adults' current financial learning, attitude and behavior, with the role played by parents substantially greater than the role played by work experience and high school financial education combined. Data also supported the proposed hierarchical financial socialization four-level model, indicating that early financial socialization is related to financial learning, which in turn is related to financial attitudes and subsequently to financial behavior. The study presents a discussion of how the theories of consumer socialization and planned behavior were combined effectively to depict the financial development of young adults. Several practical implications are also provided for parents, educators and students.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10964-009-9432-xDOI Listing

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