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Agata Gąsiorowska Wrocław University of Technology

Why We Asses Our Financial Situation As Good Or Bad? Income And Money Attitudes Influence On Subjective Financial Situation Assessment. Agata Gąsiorowska Wrocław University of Technology. 1.

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Agata Gąsiorowska Wrocław University of Technology

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  1. Why We Asses Our Financial Situation As Good Or Bad? Income And Money Attitudes Influence On Subjective Financial Situation Assessment • Agata Gąsiorowska • Wrocław University of Technology 1

  2. “Rich or poor is a state of mind. People may be financially poor but psychologically rich and vice versa”(Tang, Luna-Arocas, Sutarso, Tang, 2004, p.119) 2

  3. Factors influencing money satisfaction • The relative standards model - people evaluate their success in each domain on the base of standards such as social comparisons, desires, and comparisons with the past (Solberg et al., 2002) • People’s satisfaction with their income and material goods depends on the discrepancies between what they possess and what they desire • The size of such a discrepancy might be related to trait materialism, and to money attitudes (Shafer, 2000; Gąsiorowska, 2003). 3

  4. Measurement of Money Attitudes • Three general categories of scales used for estimation of people’s attitudes or beliefs about money • based on money utility or marginal utility - e.g. Brandstätter, Brandstätter, 1996 • “idiosyncratic” scales - e.g. Wernimont, Fitzpatrick, 1972; Prince, 1993; Rubinstein, 1981 • “real” scales - Money Attitude Scale by Yamauchi and Templer (1982), Money Beliefs and Behaviour Scale by Furnham (1984) and Money Ethic Scale by Tang (1992) • Two original Polish scales: Attitudes Towards Money Scale (Wąsowicz-Kiryło 2008, Wąsowicz-Kiryło, Wiśniewska, 2005) and SPP Money Attitudes Questionnaire (Gąsiorowska, 2003, 2008). 4

  5. SPP Money Attitudes Questionnaire • Satisfactory internal validity and reliability, better adjusted to Polish conditions than other money attitudes scales, like MAS or MES • Dimensions: • Control and planning • Power • Anxiety • Debt aversion • Occasion seeking • Money as evil • Cash 5

  6. Money attitudes and money satisfaction - previous studies • Tang, Luna-Arocas, Sutarso, Tang, 2004 • the love of money as moderator of relationship between income and pay satisfaction • the love of money is positively related to income and to pay satisfaction. • Tang, Tang, Homaifar, 2006 • income significantly increased the importance of the love of money for part of sample • income was related to pay satisfaction, love of money was not related to pay satisfaction. • Tang, Chiu, 2003 • negative relations between the love of money and pay satisfaction and between income and the love of money • Wilhelm, Varcoe and Huebner Fridrich, 1993 • the influence of the objective indicators on financial well-being not mediated by money beliefs, • money attitudes contribute in predicting assessment of financial satisfaction 6

  7. Hypotheses • H1. Subjective evaluation of financial situation depends on objective income level and on money attitudes • H2: Gender moderates the relation between income and subjective evaluation of financial situation. • H3. Gender moderates the relation between money attitudes and subjective evaluation of financial situation. 7

  8. Participants & Procedure 8

  9. Results - preliminary study control and planning β=0.22 β=0.27 β=0.13 R2=0.06 R2=0.13 anxiety financial situation β=-0.15 β=-0.14 β=-0.15 power women: χ2/df=1.021, RMSEA=0.013, TLI=0.991, CFI=0.994; 9 men: χ2/df=1.308, RMSEA=0.037, TLI=0.949, CFI=0.967

  10. Results - secondary study - Women R2=0.25 Income financial situation β=0.41 β=0.15 β=0.12 control and planning β=-0.25 β=-16 anxiety 10 χ2/df=0.709, RMSEA<0.001, TLI=1.082, CFI=1

  11. Results - secondary study - Women R2=0.22 Income financial situation β=0 control and planning β=0 anxiety 11 χ2/df=0.882, RMSEA<0.001, TLI=1.033, CFI=1

  12. Results - secondary study - Women R2=0.10 Income financial situation β=0 control and planning anxiety 12 χ2/df=1.729, RMSEA=0.075, TLI=0.794, CFI=0.868

  13. Results - secondary study - WomenMediation analyses Income financial situation control and planning p=0.156 anxiety p=0.034 13

  14. Results - secondary study - Men R2=0.50 Income β=0.53 financial situation β=0.40 control and planning β=-0.11 anxiety β=-0.17 β=-0.13 occasion seeking β=-0.20 power 14 debt aversion χ2/df=0.975, RMSEA<0.001, TLI=1.008 CFI=1

  15. Results - secondary study - Men R2=0.25 Income financial situation β=0 control and planning Β=0 anxiety Β=0 β=0 occasion seeking β=0 power 15 debt aversion χ2/df=1.917, RMSEA=0.104, TLI=0.718 CFI=0.789

  16. Results - secondary study - Men R2=0.20 Income β=0 financial situation control and planning anxiety occasion seeking power 16 debt aversion χ2/df=2.609, RMSEA=0.138, TLI=0.506, CFI=0.684

  17. Conclusions (1) • Subjective evaluation of financial situation depends not only on objective income level, but also on money attitudes • Gender does not moderate the influence of income level on money satisfaction • Contribution made by money beliefs to predict financial progress is different for men and women 17

  18. Conclusion (2) • For women • The effect of income on financial satisfaction is definitely stronger than effect of money attitudes • Anxiety connected with money is mediating the effect of income on financial satisfaction • High income reduces negative emotions and fear in the situation connected with money, which in turn increases the level of satisfaction • For men • the effect of money attitudes is primarily additive • income together with money attitudes explains financial satisfaction • It is very probable, that when females are assessing their financial situation, they take into consideration also the income their spouse/partner, but when males do so, they concentrate on their own situation, as they are socially perceived as “head of family” and breadwinners. 18

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