Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money

The current study examines the consumer socialization practices of American parents, and provides an analysis of the various ways in which they socialize their children into a consumer role within the family. Drawing from literature on gendered patterns of consumerism, familial consumer socializatio...

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Main Author: Batten, George P.
Other Authors: Sociology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52919
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-529192020-09-29T05:34:34Z Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money Batten, George P. Sociology Vogt Yuan, Anastasia Sue King, Neal M. Kiecolt, K. Jill Labuski, Christine Family consumer socialization parents money gender The current study examines the consumer socialization practices of American parents, and provides an analysis of the various ways in which they socialize their children into a consumer role within the family. Drawing from literature on gendered patterns of consumerism, familial consumer socialization, and the culture of money, this study's aim is to describe how parents teach their children to enter a consumer role, how to spend, save, and budget money, and how to culturally value (or devalue) money and wealth. This study also explores whether children's gender or differences by socioeconomic status (SES) play a part in how parents socialize their children into a consumer role. Twenty five parents were interviewed and answered questions regarding the actual tools, methods, and strategies they employ in their children's socialization into a consumer role, such as whether parents shop with their children, set allowances, or assist children in opening savings and checking accounts. Additional questions assessed the meanings parents give to money and a consumer role, such as whether parents stress the importance or the vanity of wealth. This analysis contributes to existent knowledge about the nuanced ways in which parents socialize their children as competent consumers, and has implications for familial relationships and gender and class inequality in regards to family and consumer activities. Ph. D. 2015-06-07T08:00:08Z 2015-06-07T08:00:08Z 2015-06-06 Dissertation vt_gsexam:5678 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52919 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Family
consumer socialization
parents
money
gender
spellingShingle Family
consumer socialization
parents
money
gender
Batten, George P.
Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money
description The current study examines the consumer socialization practices of American parents, and provides an analysis of the various ways in which they socialize their children into a consumer role within the family. Drawing from literature on gendered patterns of consumerism, familial consumer socialization, and the culture of money, this study's aim is to describe how parents teach their children to enter a consumer role, how to spend, save, and budget money, and how to culturally value (or devalue) money and wealth. This study also explores whether children's gender or differences by socioeconomic status (SES) play a part in how parents socialize their children into a consumer role. Twenty five parents were interviewed and answered questions regarding the actual tools, methods, and strategies they employ in their children's socialization into a consumer role, such as whether parents shop with their children, set allowances, or assist children in opening savings and checking accounts. Additional questions assessed the meanings parents give to money and a consumer role, such as whether parents stress the importance or the vanity of wealth. This analysis contributes to existent knowledge about the nuanced ways in which parents socialize their children as competent consumers, and has implications for familial relationships and gender and class inequality in regards to family and consumer activities. === Ph. D.
author2 Sociology
author_facet Sociology
Batten, George P.
author Batten, George P.
author_sort Batten, George P.
title Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money
title_short Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money
title_full Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money
title_fullStr Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money
title_full_unstemmed Consumer Socialization in Families: How Parents Teach Children about Spending, Saving, and the Importance of Money
title_sort consumer socialization in families: how parents teach children about spending, saving, and the importance of money
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52919
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