Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?

This paper primarily aims to assess the impact of financial literacy on households’ investment choices. The paper employs secondary data from the FinScope survey (2017) conducted by Financial Sector Deepening Trust (FSDT). In particular, the study aims at establishing whether the choices of investme...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Josephat Lotto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:International Journal of Financial Studies
Subjects:
age
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/8/2/29
id doaj-c316052d7f9e4c07b689f8f0f1a04c53
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c316052d7f9e4c07b689f8f0f1a04c532020-11-25T03:02:08ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Financial Studies2227-70722020-05-018292910.3390/ijfs8020029Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?Josephat Lotto0Department of Accounting and Finance, The Institute of Finance Management, Dar es Salaam 255, TanzaniaThis paper primarily aims to assess the impact of financial literacy on households’ investment choices. The paper employs secondary data from the FinScope survey (2017) conducted by Financial Sector Deepening Trust (FSDT). In particular, the study aims at establishing whether the choices of investment platforms are influenced by the financial literacy level of the heads of households. To do so, the study employed both bivariate and multivariate analytical techniques. The study finds that financial literacy is positively and significantly associated with household investment choices. More specifically, as households become more financially literate, they divert from investing in informal groups towards more formal investment platforms such as investment accounts, agricultural ventures as well as personal business. Such observations may be partly attributable to the facts that individuals whose financial literacy is sound enough are more likely to be equipped with skills and knowledge of risks associated with investment opportunities and some other several financial products. The study also reveals that financial literacy is significantly associated with households’ socio-demographic factors, and that the adult population exhibits a large financial literacy gap and, therefore, adults should not be considered as a homogenous group—instead, gender, age, education and income levels of the households, which are showcased in this study, should also be taken into consideration. The study opines that, because most of households, as revealed in the survey from which the employed dataset is based, are hailing from rural settings where agriculture is the main economic activity, we establish that agricultural ventures require a complete revamp for Tanzania to become a middle-income economy through its industrialization agenda. The study also proposes the financial literacy programmes to be rolled on to students from early stage of their education such as secondary schools.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/8/2/29agegendereducationfinancial literacyinvestment choices
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josephat Lotto
spellingShingle Josephat Lotto
Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?
International Journal of Financial Studies
age
gender
education
financial literacy
investment choices
author_facet Josephat Lotto
author_sort Josephat Lotto
title Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?
title_short Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?
title_full Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?
title_fullStr Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?
title_full_unstemmed Towards Improving Households’ Investment Choices in Tanzania: Does Financial Literacy Really Matter?
title_sort towards improving households’ investment choices in tanzania: does financial literacy really matter?
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Financial Studies
issn 2227-7072
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This paper primarily aims to assess the impact of financial literacy on households’ investment choices. The paper employs secondary data from the FinScope survey (2017) conducted by Financial Sector Deepening Trust (FSDT). In particular, the study aims at establishing whether the choices of investment platforms are influenced by the financial literacy level of the heads of households. To do so, the study employed both bivariate and multivariate analytical techniques. The study finds that financial literacy is positively and significantly associated with household investment choices. More specifically, as households become more financially literate, they divert from investing in informal groups towards more formal investment platforms such as investment accounts, agricultural ventures as well as personal business. Such observations may be partly attributable to the facts that individuals whose financial literacy is sound enough are more likely to be equipped with skills and knowledge of risks associated with investment opportunities and some other several financial products. The study also reveals that financial literacy is significantly associated with households’ socio-demographic factors, and that the adult population exhibits a large financial literacy gap and, therefore, adults should not be considered as a homogenous group—instead, gender, age, education and income levels of the households, which are showcased in this study, should also be taken into consideration. The study opines that, because most of households, as revealed in the survey from which the employed dataset is based, are hailing from rural settings where agriculture is the main economic activity, we establish that agricultural ventures require a complete revamp for Tanzania to become a middle-income economy through its industrialization agenda. The study also proposes the financial literacy programmes to be rolled on to students from early stage of their education such as secondary schools.
topic age
gender
education
financial literacy
investment choices
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/8/2/29
work_keys_str_mv AT josephatlotto towardsimprovinghouseholdsinvestmentchoicesintanzaniadoesfinancialliteracyreallymatter
_version_ 1724691258609238016