10 research outputs found
Does College Experience Effect Job Quality Of Science And Engineering Graduates? -Focusing On Gender Gap
Financial Integration and Financial Conflict: Does Less Financial Integration Relate to Increased Financial Conflict Between Romantic Partners?
Family Financial Risk Taking When the Wife Earns More
Bargaining theory, Dual earners, Financial risk taking, Household decision making,
Insurance Arrangements Among Married Couples: Analysis of Benefit Substitution and Compensating Differentials
Family health insurance, Labor force participation, Simultaneous equations,
Turnover as a Strategy to Escape Job Insecurity: The Role of Family Determinants in Dual-Earner Couples
How the study of networks informs knowledge translation and implementation: a scoping review
Imagined interactions, family money management patterns and coalitions, and attitudes toward money and credit
This study explores the imagined interactions college students have with their parents about money and credit, their attitudes toward credit and money, the ways they say their parents deal with financial decisions, and the communication coalitions regarding finances they perceive existing within their family. Students’ imagined interaction pleasantness is greatest when parents jointly form a plan for paying off credit card debt and lowest when parents argue. When family coalitions exist, students report more frequent imagined interactions. Imagined interaction frequency and pleasantness are related to credit and money attitudes. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007Credit cards, Family differentiation, Imagined interactions, Money management patterns, Parent–teen communication,