In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior

Data from the FINRA Foundation National Financial Capability Study revealed that women with low levels of financial literacy were more likely to engage in costly credit card behaviors—like incurring late and over-the-limit fees—than men with low financial literacy. There were, however, no difference...

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Main Author: Gary R. Mottola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Numeracy Network 2013-07-01
Series:Numeracy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol6/iss2/art4/
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spelling doaj-b3a9bb17f482439bad3306cc911740f52020-11-24T22:04:52ZengNational Numeracy NetworkNumeracy1936-46602013-07-01624http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.6.2.4In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card BehaviorGary R. MottolaData from the FINRA Foundation National Financial Capability Study revealed that women with low levels of financial literacy were more likely to engage in costly credit card behaviors—like incurring late and over-the-limit fees—than men with low financial literacy. There were, however, no differences in behavior between men and women with high financial literacy. Further, women and low financial literacy respondents reported paying higher interest rates on their credit cards. These findings suggest that increasing financial literacy may help reduce some gender-based differences in credit card behavior and lower credit card interest rates for both men and women.http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol6/iss2/art4/financial literacygendercredit cards
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gary R. Mottola
spellingShingle Gary R. Mottola
In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior
Numeracy
financial literacy
gender
credit cards
author_facet Gary R. Mottola
author_sort Gary R. Mottola
title In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior
title_short In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior
title_full In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior
title_fullStr In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior
title_full_unstemmed In Our Best Interest: Women, Financial Literacy, and Credit Card Behavior
title_sort in our best interest: women, financial literacy, and credit card behavior
publisher National Numeracy Network
series Numeracy
issn 1936-4660
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Data from the FINRA Foundation National Financial Capability Study revealed that women with low levels of financial literacy were more likely to engage in costly credit card behaviors—like incurring late and over-the-limit fees—than men with low financial literacy. There were, however, no differences in behavior between men and women with high financial literacy. Further, women and low financial literacy respondents reported paying higher interest rates on their credit cards. These findings suggest that increasing financial literacy may help reduce some gender-based differences in credit card behavior and lower credit card interest rates for both men and women.
topic financial literacy
gender
credit cards
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol6/iss2/art4/
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