Financial Socialization, Financial Identity, and Financial Well-Being Among University Students Taking a Consumer Economics Course

JOURNAL OF FAMILY AND ECONOMIC ISSUES(2023)

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Abstract
Derived from Marcia’s ( 1966 ) identity statuses, we examine how financial identity statuses (achievement, moratorium, foreclosure, diffusion; Barber et al. ( 2011 ); Bosch et al. ( 2016 ); Sorgente et al. ( 2020 )) relate to the preparation for taking on financial responsibilities, materialism, compulsive buying, responsible credit management, and financial anxiety and financial well-being among university students taking a Consumer Economics course. Key findings included: (1) Identity achievement was related positively to preparation for taking on financial responsibilities; (2) Identity moratorium was related positively to financial anxiety and related negatively to financial well-being; and (3) Identity diffusion was related negatively to preparation for taking on financial responsibilities and responsible credit management and related positively to materialism and compulsive buying. Findings suggest a combination of helping emerging adults become less financially dependent on parents and greater financial socialization may help them develop financial identity achievement.
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Key words
Emerging adulthood,Financial identity,Financial well-being,Financial attitudes,Financial behaviors,Financial socialization
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