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Financial Responsibility, Personality Traits and Financial Decision ...

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In total, the survey consists of 62 questions, <strong>and</strong> requires 18 minutes to complete,<br />

on average. Survey participants are interviewed via the Internet. A total of 1,721 out<br />

of 2,028 households completed the financial literacy module – a response rate of 84.9<br />

percent (in line with the response rate for the main survey).<br />

Table 1 reports summary statistics of the main variables of our survey. Here we<br />

report items in four clusters, representing the life-cycle <strong>and</strong> personality of the respon-<br />

dents; variables relating to the household demographics (section A), variables related to<br />

their youth <strong>and</strong> upbringing (section B), variables related to their education, skills, <strong>and</strong><br />

interests (section C), <strong>and</strong> variables related to their personality <strong>and</strong> attitude (section D).<br />

In section E, we report statistics on the respondents savings behavior. The variables<br />

of section A are most common in the literature on financial literacy <strong>and</strong> education. In<br />

the cluster of youth <strong>and</strong> upbringing, we seek for effects that parents may have had on<br />

the savings behavior (while controlling for generational effects) of their offspring. In<br />

the third cluster we group variables that indicate the skills of the respondent, which are<br />

partly trained by education <strong>and</strong> partly developed by personal interests. Here, we also<br />

include the financial literacy construct of Lusardi <strong>and</strong> Mitchell (2007). In section E,<br />

we group variables that are inspired by the behavioral psychology literature. Here we<br />

test whether saving behavior coincides with personality features like optimism, being<br />

organized, <strong>and</strong> a strong locus of control. The statistics in Table 1 are presented for<br />

the full sample of 1,721 respondents, <strong>and</strong> for two sub groups the spenders versus the<br />

savers. We define these sub groups based on the respondents reply to the question<br />

that measures the extent to which they are willing to sacrifice immediate wellbeing to<br />

achieve future results. Savers are the group that scores high on this question, while the<br />

reverse is true for spenders.<br />

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