Financial Education Effects on Financial Behavior and Well-Being: The Mediating Roles of Improved Objective and Subjective Financial Knowledge and Parallels in Physical Health

被引:5
作者
Netemeyer, Richard G. [1 ]
Lynch Jr, John G. [2 ]
Lichtenstein, Donald R. [2 ]
Dobolyi, David [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Virginia, McIntire Sch Commerce, Free Enterprise, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
[2] Univ Colorado, Leeds Sch Business, Mkt, Boulder, CO USA
[3] Univ Colorado, Leeds Sch Business, Org Leadership & Informat Analyt, Boulder, CO USA
关键词
subjective knowledge; financial education; financial behaviors; financial well-being; health education; health behaviors; health well-being; LITERACY; INFORMATION; MODEL; CONCEPTUALIZATION; METAANALYSIS; CAPABILITY; CONFIDENCE;
D O I
10.1177/07439156241228197
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
How does financial education lead to improved financial behavior and higher financial well-being? An influential Consumer Financial Protection Bureau model introduced in 2015 proposes that the goal of financial education is to improve financial well-being and that financial education does so by increasing financial knowledge, which improves financial behavior, which improves financial well-being. In this study, the authors test links in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau model, examining the differential roles of objective and subjective knowledge. They also test whether an analogous model might capture effects of physical health education on physical health knowledge, behavior, and well-being. They report a quasi-experiment comparing changes in financial and physical health knowledge, behavior, and well-being at two time points in a semester for students enrolled in a personal finance class, a personal health class, or neither. This study reports the first causal estimates of flow from financial education to financial knowledge to financial behaviors to a validated measure of subjective financial well-being. Financial education caused large changes in both objective and subjective knowledge. Yet only subjective knowledge mediated the large effects of financial education on changes in downstream behaviors. The authors find weaker but similar results for physical health. The findings suggest that financial education efforts should be refocused to foster subjective knowledge and improved behavior.
引用
收藏
页码:254 / 275
页数:22
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