Does Financial Education Impact Financial Literacy and Financial Behavior, and If So, When?
A meta-analysis of 126 impact evaluation studies finds that financial education significantly impacts financial behavior and, to an even larger extent, financial literacy. These results also hold for the subsample of randomized experiments (RCTs). However, intervention impacts are highly heterogeneous: financial education is less effective for low-income clients as well as in low- and lower-middle income economies. Specific behaviors, such as the handling of debt, are more difficult to influence and mandatory financial education tentatively appears to be less effective. Thus, intervention success depends crucially on increasing education intensity and offering financial education at a "teachable moment."
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2017-08
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Subjects: | FINANCIAL INCLUSION, FINANCIAL LITERACY, FINANCIAL EDUCATION, FINANCIAL BEHAVIOR, META-ANALYSIS, META-REGRESSION, IMPACT EVALUATION, RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/144551502300810101/Does-financial-education-impact-financial-literacy-and-financial-behavior-and-if-so-when https://hdl.handle.net/10986/27968 |
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Summary: | A meta-analysis of 126 impact evaluation
studies finds that financial education significantly impacts
financial behavior and, to an even larger extent, financial
literacy. These results also hold for the subsample of
randomized experiments (RCTs). However, intervention impacts
are highly heterogeneous: financial education is less
effective for low-income clients as well as in low- and
lower-middle income economies. Specific behaviors, such as
the handling of debt, are more difficult to influence and
mandatory financial education tentatively appears to be less
effective. Thus, intervention success depends crucially on
increasing education intensity and offering financial
education at a "teachable moment." |
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