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Journal ArticleDOI

Money Attitudes, Credit Card Use, and Compulsive Buying among American College Students.

TLDR
The authors investigated the role money attitudes and credit card use play in compulsive buying within a sample of American college students and found that the money attitudes power prestige, distrust, and anxiety, and that credit card usage often moderates these relationships.
Abstract
The consumer culture has evolved into one of the most powerful forces shaping individuals and societies (Roberts and Sepulveda 1999 a, b). The desire to become a member of the consumer culture appears to be universal (Droge and Mackoy 1995). Changing attitudes toward money are an important catalyst behind the spread of the consumer culture. Money is important—especially to American college students who have been raised in a credit card society where debt is used freely (Ritzer 1995). Schor (1998) believes that access to easy credit is one of the causes of overspending. Using a causal modeling approach, the present study investigated the role money attitudes and credit card use play in compulsive buying within a sample of American college students (see Figure 1). Findings suggest that the money attitudes powerprestige, distrust, and anxiety (Yamauchi and Templer 1982) are closely related to compulsive buying and that credit card use often moderates these relationships. Study results have important public policy, marketing, and research implications.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Financial Literacy Among the Young

TL;DR: The authors showed that financial literacy is low among the young; fewer than one-third of young adults possess basic knowledge of interest rates, inflation, and risk diversification, and that financial knowledge is strongly related to sociodemographic characteristics and family financial sophistication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Financial Literacy among the Young

TL;DR: This article showed that financial literacy among the young is low; fewer than one-third of young adults possess basic knowledge of interest rates, inflation, and risk diversification, and the financial literacy was strongly related to sociodemographic characteristics and family financial sophistication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Personality factors, money attitudes, financial knowledge, and credit-card debt in college students

TL;DR: This paper explored factors hypothesized to be causes and effects of credit-card debt in 448 students on five college campuses, including students without credit cards or credit card debt, and found that lack of financial knowledge, age, number of credit cards, delay of gratification, and attitudes toward credit card use were related to debt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compulsive buying--a growing concern? An examination of gender, age, and endorsement of materialistic values as predictors.

TL;DR: It was found that materialistic value endorsement emerged as the strongest predictor of individuals' compulsive buying, and that it significantly mediated the observed age differences.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Expanded Conceptualization and a New Measure of Compulsive Buying

TL;DR: In this article, a measure of consumers' propensity to buy compulsively is defined as a consumer's tendency to be preoccupied with buying that is revealed through repetitive buying and a lack of impulse control over buying.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.

TL;DR: This article seeks to make theorists and researchers aware of the importance of not using the terms moderator and mediator interchangeably by carefully elaborating the many ways in which moderators and mediators differ, and delineates the conceptual and strategic implications of making use of such distinctions with regard to a wide range of phenomena.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative fit indexes in structural models

TL;DR: A new coefficient is proposed to summarize the relative reduction in the noncentrality parameters of two nested models and two estimators of the coefficient yield new normed (CFI) and nonnormed (FI) fit indexes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Significance tests and goodness of fit in the analysis of covariance structures

TL;DR: In this article, a general null model based on modified independence among variables is proposed to provide an additional reference point for the statistical and scientific evaluation of covariance structure models, and the importance of supplementing statistical evaluation with incremental fit indices associated with the comparison of hierarchical models.
Book

The nature of human values

Journal ArticleDOI

The Nature of Human Values.

Helen Gouldner, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1975 - 
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How does money influence how students buy clothes?

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