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One (Financial Well-Being) Model Fits All? Testing the Multidimensional Subjective Financial Well-Being Scale Across Nine Countries

Authors :
Sorgente, Angela
Atay, B.
Aubrey, M.
Bhatia, S.
Crespo, C.
Fonseca, G.
Guneri, O. Y.
Lep, Z.
Lessard, D.
Negru-Subtirica, O.
Portugal, A.
Ranta, M.
Relvas, A. P.
Singh, N.
Sirsch, U.
Zupancic, M.
Lanz, Margherita
Sorgente A. (ORCID:0000-0003-1046-0409)
Lanz M. (ORCID:0000-0001-7476-0721)
Sorgente, Angela
Atay, B.
Aubrey, M.
Bhatia, S.
Crespo, C.
Fonseca, G.
Guneri, O. Y.
Lep, Z.
Lessard, D.
Negru-Subtirica, O.
Portugal, A.
Ranta, M.
Relvas, A. P.
Singh, N.
Sirsch, U.
Zupancic, M.
Lanz, Margherita
Sorgente A. (ORCID:0000-0003-1046-0409)
Lanz M. (ORCID:0000-0001-7476-0721)
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

A multidimensional model of emerging adults’ subjective financial well-being was proposed (Sorgente and Lanz, Int Journal of Behavioral Development, 43(5), 466–478 2019). The authors also developed a 5-factor scale (the Multidimensional Subjective Financial Well-being Scale, MSFWBS) intending to measure this construct in the European context. To date, data using this instrument have been collected in nine countries: Austria, Canada, Finland, India, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, and Turkey. In the current study, data from these countries were analysed to test the validity of this model internationally. In particular, using an international sample of 4,475 emerging adults, we collected the following kinds of validity evidence for the MSFWBS: score structure, reliability, generalizability, convergent, and criterion-related evidence. Findings suggest that the MSFWBS (1) yields valid and reliable scores, and (2) works well in individualistic and economically developed countries, producing comparable scores. Implications for researchers and practitioners are discussed.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1439666265
Document Type :
Electronic Resource