The distribution of financial responsibility within the family and its effect on family risk behaviors

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Zheying Yao

[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] Men are more willing to take risks and invest more in stocks than women. Do gender differences with respect to risk tolerance still exist within married and cohabiting couples? In a family, spouses might have different risk attitudes and risk behaviors. This dissertation used the Health and Retirement Survey (HRS) longitudinal data to explore the distribution of financial responsibility in a family. Family members designated as "financial respondents" were the people most knowledgeable about the financial situation of the family and they answered HRS questions about finance. Also, the dissertation studied the relationship between the gender of financial respondents and portfolio allocation, adequate emergency funds, and debt burden. The financial respondent's approach to these three factors showed the respondent's attitude toward risk and constituted a family's financial risk behavior. The dissertation found that a family in which the husband/male partner was financially responsible had a higher proportion the family's portfolio in business interests and less in cash. Intra-family interactions between husband and wife reduced gender differences regarding an adequate emergency fund and debt burden. This paper further compared the actual risks in the portfolio with self-reported risk tolerance and found that when women were the financial respondent, the risk of their portfolio might be closer to their self-assessment risk tolerance. Emotionally stable spouses have a greater impact on family investment decisions than spouses with lower emotional stability.

2022 ◽  
pp. 64-82
Author(s):  
Júlio Lobão

In this chapter, the author examines the influence of gender on financial risk tolerance. The risk tolerance is assessed by the instrument developed by Grable and Lytton in a sample that includes 272 postgraduate students of the University of Porto (Portugal). The results show that males are significantly more risk-tolerant than females, even after controlling for factors such as the economic status and educational levels of the respondents' parents. The gender differences seem to be essentially driven by a higher proportion of males with high levels of risk tolerance. Moreover, belonging to a household with a high level of annual income contributes to increase the likelihood of exhibiting high levels of risk tolerance. In the total sample, the levels of risk tolerance are lower than those reported in similar studies. Overall, the author documents that there are significant gender differences in financial risk perception.


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