A growing body of literature examines the causal impact of financial literacy on
individual, household, and firm level outcomes. This paper unpacks the mechanism
of impact by focusing on the first link in the causal chain. Specifically, it
studies the experimental impact of financial literacy on three distinct
dimensions of financial knowledge.
The analysis finds that financial literacy
does not immediately enable individuals to discern costs and rewards that
require high numeracy skills, but it does significantly improve basic awareness
of financial choices and attitudes toward financial decisions.
Monetary
incentives do not induce better performance, suggesting cognitive constraints
rather than lack of attention are a key barrier to improving financial
knowledge. These results illuminate the strengths and limitations of financial
literacy training, which can inform the design and anticipated effects of such
programs.
Author: Carpena, Fenella; Cole, Shawn; Shapiro, Jeremy ; Zia, Bilal. Document Date: 2011/09/01.Document Type: Policy Research Working Paper.Report Number: WPS5798.Volume No: 1 of 1
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