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What Do Subjective Assessments of Financial Well-Being Reflect?

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  • Steven A. Sass
  • Anek Belbase
  • Thomas Cooperrider
  • Jorge D. Ramos-Mercado

Abstract

Subjective financial assessments are used by social scientists as a measure of financial well-being and by households as the basis for action. Financial well-being, however, increasingly requires workers to build-up savings to meet hard-to-see future needs, specifically retirement, their children’s education, and paying off student loans. This paper analyzes data from the FINRA Investor Education Foundation’s 2012 Financial Capability Survey to test whether subjective financial assessments 1) primarily reflect day-to-day, rather than distant, financial concerns; 2) increasingly reflect distant concerns if the household’s day-to-day finances are in reasonably good shape; and 3) increasingly reflect distant concerns if the worker is financially literate. The paper found that: * Subjective financial assessments primarily reflect day-to-day conditions. * This remains the case even if the household’s day-to-day finances are in reasonably good shape. * Financial literacy enhances sensitivity to the lack of a retirement plan and having a mortgage greater than the value of one’s house, but it has no noticeable effect on sensitivity to life and medical insurance deficits, having an inactive retirement plan, not saving for college, or student debt burdens. The policy implications of the findings are: * Subjective financial assessments have become a poor measure of financial well-being. * Workers by themselves cannot be expected to devote much effort to addressing distant deficits. * Initiatives to improve well-being must raise awareness – or compensate for the lack of awareness – of hard-to-see distant future deficits.

Suggested Citation

  • Steven A. Sass & Anek Belbase & Thomas Cooperrider & Jorge D. Ramos-Mercado, 2015. "What Do Subjective Assessments of Financial Well-Being Reflect?," Working Papers, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College wp2015-3, Center for Retirement Research.
  • Handle: RePEc:crr:crrwps:wp2015-3
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    Cited by:

    1. David B. Allsop & McKay N. Boyack & E. Jeffrey Hill & Christoffer L. Loderup & Joshua E. Timmons, 2021. "When Parenting Pays Off: Influences of Parental Financial Socialization on Children’s Outcomes in Emerging Adulthood," Journal of Family and Economic Issues, Springer, vol. 42(3), pages 545-560, September.
    2. Sonja Spitzer & Angela Greulich & Bernhard Hammer, 2022. "The Subjective Cost of Young Children: A European Comparison," Social Indicators Research: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal for Quality-of-Life Measurement, Springer, vol. 163(3), pages 1165-1189, October.
    3. Tomasz Panek & Piotr Białowolski & Irena E. Kotowska & Janusz Czapiński & Justyna Pytkowska & Katarzyna Pawlak & Tadeusz Szumlicz, 2015. "Household living conditions. Material affluence," Contemporary Economics, University of Economics and Human Sciences in Warsaw., vol. 9(4), December.
    4. Sonja Spitzer & Angela Greulich & Bernhard Hammer, 2018. "The Subjective Cost of Young Children: A European Comparison," VID Working Papers 1812, Vienna Institute of Demography (VID) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna.
    5. Angela Greulich & Sonja Spitzer & Bernhard Hammer, 2022. "The Subjective Cost of Young Children: A European Comparison," Post-Print hal-03677151, HAL.
    6. Angela Greulich & Sonja Spitzer & Bernhard Hammer, 2022. "The Subjective Cost of Young Children: A European Comparison," SciencePo Working papers Main hal-03677151, HAL.

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