A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families

<p>This study was designed to compare the financial situation of both remarried and first-married families from a large randomly selected sample. An adaptation of Campbell, Converse, and Rogers' "Model of Life Satisfaction" was used as the theoretical basis for this investigatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Linzey, Juanita Bird
Other Authors: Housing, Interior Design, and Resource Management
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43197
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06112009-063919/
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-43197
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-431972021-05-15T05:26:26Z A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families Linzey, Juanita Bird Housing, Interior Design, and Resource Management Lytton, Ruth H. Leech, Irene E. Sporakowski, Michael J. LD5655.V855 1993.L569 Families -- Economic aspects Home economics -- Finance Remarriage -- Economic aspects <p>This study was designed to compare the financial situation of both remarried and first-married families from a large randomly selected sample. An adaptation of Campbell, Converse, and Rogers' "Model of Life Satisfaction" was used as the theoretical basis for this investigation. Data were compared to assess differences in (a) personal characteristics; (b) objective attributes, the personal resources of homeowners hip, income, education, employment status, and occupation; (c) perceived attributes, financial attitudes and management behaviors of respondents; (d) evaluated attributes, an assessment of financial situation; and (e) satisfaction level with financial situation.</p> </p> The respondents were a sub-set from pre-collected data sets entitled Financial Attitudes and Practices of Virginia Citizens, Form A and Form B, (N=1098). Responses to items identical in both survey forms were merged to create a new data base which was used in this study. A sample of 173 remarried and 173 first-married respondents was used.</p> </p>Descriptive statistics were used to profile the two respondent groups. Independent t test and chi-square analyses were used to compare responses by marital status. Remarried and first-married respondents were similar in personal characteristics except in ethnicity and gender role philosophy with the remarrieds having a more egalitarian than traditional philosophy. The two groups were similar in objective attributes except in educational attainment. The remarried spouses were not as well educated as their counterparts. Financial management behavior and attitudes were similar for both groups except in the area of risk management and capital accumulation. Both groups reported a positive net worth and adequate income, however, remarrieds were less satisfied with their financial situation than first-marrieds. The results of this study demonstrated differences in the financial domain of remarried and first-married households and pointed to areas of concern for educators and family life specialists.</p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:38:07Z 2014-03-14T21:38:07Z 1993-08-05 2009-06-11 2009-06-11 2009-06-11 Thesis Text etd-06112009-063919 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43197 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06112009-063919/ en OCLC# 29746289 LD5655.V855_1993.L569.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xi, 139 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1993.L569
Families -- Economic aspects
Home economics -- Finance
Remarriage -- Economic aspects
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1993.L569
Families -- Economic aspects
Home economics -- Finance
Remarriage -- Economic aspects
Linzey, Juanita Bird
A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
description <p>This study was designed to compare the financial situation of both remarried and first-married families from a large randomly selected sample. An adaptation of Campbell, Converse, and Rogers' "Model of Life Satisfaction" was used as the theoretical basis for this investigation. Data were compared to assess differences in (a) personal characteristics; (b) objective attributes, the personal resources of homeowners hip, income, education, employment status, and occupation; (c) perceived attributes, financial attitudes and management behaviors of respondents; (d) evaluated attributes, an assessment of financial situation; and (e) satisfaction level with financial situation.</p> </p> The respondents were a sub-set from pre-collected data sets entitled Financial Attitudes and Practices of Virginia Citizens, Form A and Form B, (N=1098). Responses to items identical in both survey forms were merged to create a new data base which was used in this study. A sample of 173 remarried and 173 first-married respondents was used.</p> </p>Descriptive statistics were used to profile the two respondent groups. Independent t test and chi-square analyses were used to compare responses by marital status. Remarried and first-married respondents were similar in personal characteristics except in ethnicity and gender role philosophy with the remarrieds having a more egalitarian than traditional philosophy. The two groups were similar in objective attributes except in educational attainment. The remarried spouses were not as well educated as their counterparts. Financial management behavior and attitudes were similar for both groups except in the area of risk management and capital accumulation. Both groups reported a positive net worth and adequate income, however, remarrieds were less satisfied with their financial situation than first-marrieds. The results of this study demonstrated differences in the financial domain of remarried and first-married households and pointed to areas of concern for educators and family life specialists.</p> === Master of Science
author2 Housing, Interior Design, and Resource Management
author_facet Housing, Interior Design, and Resource Management
Linzey, Juanita Bird
author Linzey, Juanita Bird
author_sort Linzey, Juanita Bird
title A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
title_short A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
title_full A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
title_fullStr A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
title_sort comparison of the financial situations and practices of remarried and first-married families
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43197
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06112009-063919/
work_keys_str_mv AT linzeyjuanitabird acomparisonofthefinancialsituationsandpracticesofremarriedandfirstmarriedfamilies
AT linzeyjuanitabird comparisonofthefinancialsituationsandpracticesofremarriedandfirstmarriedfamilies
_version_ 1719404521188229120