An item response theory approach to constructing and evaluating brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales

We applied item response theory (IRT) to construct and evaluate new brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales. A survey of a UK adult sample (N = 589) included 50 questions to assess knowledge about managing financial resources and competence in using personal finance‐related information—includin...

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Published inThe Journal of consumer affairs Vol. 54; no. 3; pp. 1121 - 1156
Main Authors Ranyard, Rob, McNair, Simon, Nicolini, Gianni, Duxbury, Darren
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Malden, USA Wiley Periodicals, Inc 01.09.2020
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Abstract We applied item response theory (IRT) to construct and evaluate new brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales. A survey of a UK adult sample (N = 589) included 50 questions to assess knowledge about managing financial resources and competence in using personal finance‐related information—including five widely used items, on interest rates, inflation, investment diversification, mortgages and bonds. IRT applied to a scale of these items identified some limitations, overcome via further iterations to construct a new brief scale with sound psychometric properties. IRT was then applied iteratively to our pool, resulting in an in‐depth, 20‐item scale, also psychometrically sound, covering four broad financial domains: everyday money transactions; the concept of money; borrowing; and saving and investment. Parallel 10‐item sub‐scales were also evaluated. The validity of the new scales was demonstrated by regression analyses which found that, controlling for demographic variables, financial literacy predicted key indicators of financial well‐being.
AbstractList We applied item response theory (IRT) to construct and evaluate new brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales. A survey of a UK adult sample (N = 589) included 50 questions to assess knowledge about managing financial resources and competence in using personal finance‐related information—including five widely used items, on interest rates, inflation, investment diversification, mortgages and bonds. IRT applied to a scale of these items identified some limitations, overcome via further iterations to construct a new brief scale with sound psychometric properties. IRT was then applied iteratively to our pool, resulting in an in‐depth, 20‐item scale, also psychometrically sound, covering four broad financial domains: everyday money transactions; the concept of money; borrowing; and saving and investment. Parallel 10‐item sub‐scales were also evaluated. The validity of the new scales was demonstrated by regression analyses which found that, controlling for demographic variables, financial literacy predicted key indicators of financial well‐being.
We applied item response theory (IRT) to construct and evaluate new brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales. A survey of a UK adult sample ( N = 589) included 50 questions to assess knowledge about managing financial resources and competence in using personal finance‐related information—including five widely used items, on interest rates, inflation, investment diversification, mortgages and bonds. IRT applied to a scale of these items identified some limitations, overcome via further iterations to construct a new brief scale with sound psychometric properties. IRT was then applied iteratively to our pool, resulting in an in‐depth, 20‐item scale, also psychometrically sound, covering four broad financial domains: everyday money transactions; the concept of money; borrowing; and saving and investment. Parallel 10‐item sub‐scales were also evaluated. The validity of the new scales was demonstrated by regression analyses which found that, controlling for demographic variables, financial literacy predicted key indicators of financial well‐being.
Author Nicolini, Gianni
Ranyard, Rob
McNair, Simon
Duxbury, Darren
Author_xml – sequence: 1
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  orcidid: 0000-0003-4293-9510
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  fullname: Ranyard, Rob
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  organization: Leeds University Business School
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  surname: McNair
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  fullname: Nicolini, Gianni
  organization: Faculty of Economics, Tor Vergata University of Rome
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  givenname: Darren
  surname: Duxbury
  fullname: Duxbury, Darren
  organization: Newcastle University Business School
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Snippet We applied item response theory (IRT) to construct and evaluate new brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales. A survey of a UK adult sample (N = 589)...
We applied item response theory (IRT) to construct and evaluate new brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales. A survey of a UK adult sample ( N = 589)...
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SubjectTerms Bonds
Economic well being
Financial literacy
Inflation
Interest rates
Investments
Item response theory
Literacy
Money
Mortgages
Personal finance
Property
Psychometrics
scale development
Well being
Title An item response theory approach to constructing and evaluating brief and in‐depth financial literacy scales
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fjoca.12322
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2444897354
Volume 54
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