Household financial decision making: Qualitative research with couples
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partner. The male partner may now veto the decision, e.g. if he does not like any of the options to have emerged from the research. Both partners are involved in the final discussion(s) and feel that they contribute to it collaboratively. Decision 17 Attitudes to financial decision making To summarise, women tended to have more influence across the decision-making process, and were often behind its instigation. Men’s reported involvement varied, although most felt that they had an integral role at the final stage. Lastly, individual income did not appear to influence the tasks that partners undertook, or their level of influence: that one partner earned significantly more than the other, did not necessarily mean they had more influence on the decision-making process, or its outcome. 18 Decision-making typologies 3 Decision-making typologies One aim of the research was to identify any emerging decision-making typologies for couples, describing groups of couples with similar characteristics. This chapter describes the process for identifying groups within the couples who took part in the research, and goes on to discuss these groups in turn. 3.1 Creating typologies In order to identify groups with similar behaviour within the 24 couples, we created several matrices based on the emotions that participants typically exhibited – to greater or lesser extents – when discussing financial decision making. Because financial confidence and emotional factors were drivers of behaviour, we decided that ‘daunted’ versus ‘confident’ were the most suitable emotions for the x-axis, and ‘relaxed’ versus ‘stressed’ for the y-axis. We assigned each participant a position on the matrix, before linking partners together. Download 0.75 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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