6533b836fe1ef96bd12a1185

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The relationship between migration background and knowledge and understanding of personal finance of young adults in Germany

Manuel FörsterRoland Happ

subject

Financebusiness.industry030503 health policy & servicesmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesEconomics educationFrequency of uselanguage.human_languageEducationTest (assessment)German03 medical and health sciences0502 economics and businesslanguageFinancial literacyLocal language050207 economicsYoung adult0305 other medical scienceFunction (engineering)businessPsychologymedia_common

description

Abstract Financial knowledge and understanding is needed to function well in society; however, young people with a migration background in Germany have been found to perform worse on tests of financial knowledge than those without. Very little investigation has been made into the relationship between financial knowledge and language ability, and ostensibly no in-depth investigation has been made into the connection between frequency of use of the local language and how it correlates to performance on such tests. In this paper we examine the relationship between migration background and knowledge and understanding of personal finance of young adults in Germany. We administered a validated German version of the Council for Economic Education’s Test of Financial Literacy to 1037 individuals between the ages of 17 and 25 and controlled not only for migration background but also for frequency of German language use. In line with results of previous studies, we found participants with a migration background generally had less financial knowledge than those with no migration background. More specifically, migrants who spoke predominantly a language other than German at home demonstrated less financial knowledge than those who spoke German at home with their families. Thus, it is not migration background per se, but rather more obscure variables related to migration background that may influence performance on such tests of financial knowledge.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.iree.2018.06.003