The Psychology of COVID-19 Economic Impact Payment Use

被引:0
|
作者
Sarah D. Asebedo
Taufiq Hasan Quadria
Blake T. Gray
Yi Liu
机构
[1] Texas Tech University,School of Personal Financial Planning, College of Human Sciences
[2] St. John Fisher College,Department of Accounting & Finance, School of Business
来源
关键词
Economic impact payments; CARES Act; COVID-19; Financial self-efficacy; Big five personality traits; Spending needs and wants;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study investigates how American adults’ personality and financial self-efficacy (FSE) beliefs contributed to how they used their COVID-19 CARES Act Economic Impact Payment (EIP) for spending needs, spending wants, and financial transactions (save, invest, debt repayment). The results from a sample of 1172 Amazon MTurk users collected in July 2020 suggest that both personality traits and FSE beliefs were associated with EIP use. Specifically, this study finds that FSE and conscientiousness emerged as the most robust predictors of EIP use across all categories of financial behavior with a greater allocation of EIP funds to saving and less to spending needs and debt repayment. Additionally, greater FSE is associated with investing, while greater conscientiousness is connected to more spending on wants. The results suggest that saving habits associated with personality and FSE persist in a crisis environment, and pre-crisis preparedness may allow for greater spending flexibility on wants. Significant relationships were also found for openness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. The findings highlight how people use unexpected financial windfalls during crises and uncertainty and how personal characteristics contribute to this decision making.
引用
收藏
页码:239 / 260
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Symposium on the Economic Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Introduction
    Chen, Zhiqi
    FRONTIERS OF ECONOMICS IN CHINA, 2020, 15 (04) : 475 - 477
  • [32] The Economic Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Radiology Practices
    Cavallo, Joseph J.
    Forman, Howard P.
    RADIOLOGY, 2020, 296 (03) : E141 - E144
  • [33] Social economic impact of COVID-19 outbreak in India
    Kumar, M. Sandeep
    Maheshwari, V.
    Prabhu, J.
    Prasanna, M.
    Jayalakshmi, P.
    Suganya, P.
    Malar, M. B. Benjula Anbu
    Jothikumar, R.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PERVASIVE COMPUTING AND COMMUNICATIONS, 2020, 16 (04) : 309 - 319
  • [34] The Economic Impact of COVID-19 from a Global Perspective
    Khan, Alam
    Khan, Nadeem
    Shafiq, Muhammad
    CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS, 2021, 15 (01) : 64 - 75
  • [35] People with Disabilities and COVID-19 Economic Impact Payments
    McGarity, Stephen Vandiver
    Morris, Zachary A.
    JOURNAL OF POVERTY, 2023, 27 (02) : 185 - 196
  • [36] Impact of the COVID-19 on the Economic Medialiteracy in Online Media
    Kitsa, Mariana
    Mudra, Iryna
    MEDIA EDUCATION-MEDIAOBRAZOVANIE, 2021, (02): : 290 - 300
  • [37] Impact of COVID-19 on the use of the academic library
    De Groote, Sandra
    Scoulas, Jung Mi
    REFERENCE SERVICES REVIEW, 2021, 49 (3-4) : 281 - 301
  • [38] Blending data to understand the economic impact of COVID-19
    Brave S.A.
    Hutchinson R.
    Kurz C.J.
    Stepner M.
    Jarmin R.
    Business Economics, 2022, 57 (2) : 64 - 77
  • [39] The Impact of COVID-19 on CGM Use in the Hospital
    Ehrhardt, Nicole
    Hirsch, Irl B.
    DIABETES CARE, 2020, 43 (11) : 2628 - 2630
  • [40] Teachers' use of technology and the impact of Covid-19
    Winter, Eileen
    Costello, Aisling
    O'Brien, Moya
    Hickey, Grainne
    IRISH EDUCATIONAL STUDIES, 2021, 40 (02) : 235 - 246