Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia

Consumers in Australia and other developed countries are increasingly required to interact with providers of complex financial products and services, and to estimate, mitigate or absorb the risks that flow from their financial decisions. A range of debt-related problems in Australia have been attr...

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Main Authors: Evgenia Bourova, Malcolm Anderson, Ian Ramsay, Paul Ali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Wollongong 2018-12-01
Series:Australasian Accounting, Business and Finance Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ro.uow.edu.au/aabfj/vol12/iss4/2
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spelling doaj-f4b4464c728a4f069167450c0ae2481c2020-11-25T00:14:10ZengUniversity of WollongongAustralasian Accounting, Business and Finance Journal1834-20001834-20192018-12-0112442310.14453/aabfj.v8i4.2 Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia Evgenia Bourova0Malcolm Anderson1Ian Ramsay2Paul Ali3Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, AustraliaThe University of Melbourne; Australian Institute of Archaeology, La Trobe University,Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, AustraliaMelbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, AustraliaConsumers in Australia and other developed countries are increasingly required to interact with providers of complex financial products and services, and to estimate, mitigate or absorb the risks that flow from their financial decisions. A range of debt-related problems in Australia have been attributed to low levels of financial literacy in the population. However, there has been limited research exploring the relationship between low financial literacy and the problem of financial hardship, where a consumer takes on payment obligations under a contract, but then becomes unable to meet them when they fall due. Drawing on a survey of Australians who recently experienced debt problems, this article examines the impact of financial literacy levels and levels of confidence in managing day-to-day spending on severity of financial hardship. The article also examines the impacts of financial literacy and confidence levels on the strategies employed to get by financially while in debt. The article shows that while there is no straightforward relationship between low financial literacy and severity of financial hardship, lower levels of financial literacy may reduce consumers’ ability to avoid some of the more serious consequences of default, particularly if coupled with overconfidence about their ability to manage spending.https://ro.uow.edu.au/aabfj/vol12/iss4/2Financial literacyfinancial hardshipoverconfidenceAustralia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evgenia Bourova
Malcolm Anderson
Ian Ramsay
Paul Ali
spellingShingle Evgenia Bourova
Malcolm Anderson
Ian Ramsay
Paul Ali
Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia
Australasian Accounting, Business and Finance Journal
Financial literacy
financial hardship
overconfidence
Australia
author_facet Evgenia Bourova
Malcolm Anderson
Ian Ramsay
Paul Ali
author_sort Evgenia Bourova
title Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia
title_short Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia
title_full Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia
title_fullStr Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of Financial Literacy and Confidence on the Severity of Financial Hardship in Australia
title_sort impacts of financial literacy and confidence on the severity of financial hardship in australia
publisher University of Wollongong
series Australasian Accounting, Business and Finance Journal
issn 1834-2000
1834-2019
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Consumers in Australia and other developed countries are increasingly required to interact with providers of complex financial products and services, and to estimate, mitigate or absorb the risks that flow from their financial decisions. A range of debt-related problems in Australia have been attributed to low levels of financial literacy in the population. However, there has been limited research exploring the relationship between low financial literacy and the problem of financial hardship, where a consumer takes on payment obligations under a contract, but then becomes unable to meet them when they fall due. Drawing on a survey of Australians who recently experienced debt problems, this article examines the impact of financial literacy levels and levels of confidence in managing day-to-day spending on severity of financial hardship. The article also examines the impacts of financial literacy and confidence levels on the strategies employed to get by financially while in debt. The article shows that while there is no straightforward relationship between low financial literacy and severity of financial hardship, lower levels of financial literacy may reduce consumers’ ability to avoid some of the more serious consequences of default, particularly if coupled with overconfidence about their ability to manage spending.
topic Financial literacy
financial hardship
overconfidence
Australia
url https://ro.uow.edu.au/aabfj/vol12/iss4/2
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