Financial capability incorporates skills, behavior, and knowledge in five areas: making ends meet,
keeping track, planning ahead, choosing products, and staying informed. People should understand how to manage
their money, use credit, choose insurance, pay taxes, and save for emergencies, long-term financial security,
and development (Atkinson et al., 2006). Time Perspective is a basic psychological dimension of time. Time
perspective is used both in temporal coding and collecting and remembering events, as well as in the formation of
expectations, objectives and imaginary scenarios. Results of several studies confirm that types of Time Perspective
are significantly linked to several important aspects of human functioning (Przepiorka et al., 2016). The aim of
this study is to explore the relationship between time perspective and financial capability. Data were collected in
2017 in Ankara, Çankaya district, Turkey. In this study, the total number of participants was determined using
a random sampling method, and 513 participants completed the survey. About half (50.7%) of the sample were
women; 49.3% were men. The average age of the participant’s was 31.2 (SD = 12.09). More than half (59.1%) of
the sample were single. This research finds that domains of time perspective were significantly related to financial
capability except past-positive and present-hedonistic. Participants who focused a generally negative, aversive
view of the past (past-negative) and a fatalistic, helpless, and hopeless attitude toward the future and life (presentfatalistic)
were negatively associated financial capability. Participants who focused a general future orientation
(future-orientation) were positively associated financial capability
Financial capability time perspectives financial knowledge financial socialization financial risk
Primary Language | English |
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Journal Section | Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | January 3, 2019 |
Published in Issue | Year 2018 Volume: 2 Issue: 2 |