Unbanked status and use of alternative financial services among minority populations.

IF 1 4区 经济学 Q3 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Journal of Pension Economics & Finance Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Epub Date: 2019-02-28 DOI:10.1017/s1474747219000052
Silvia Helena Barcellos, Gema Zamarro
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A large number of Americans do not have bank accounts (the 'unbanked') or rely on costly alternative financial services (AFS) such as payday loans (the 'underbanked'), with implications for wealth accumulation and retirement preparedness. Using primary data, we document large racial/ethnic differences in unbanked and in frequent AFS usage rates. We study the role of socio-economic status (SES), financial literacy, trust in financial institutions, networks, and time preferences in explaining these gaps. While these variables explain a large fraction of the white-minority gaps in unbanked status the same is not true for gaps in AFS use. A Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition confirms these patterns: gaps in unbanked status are mostly explained by differences in endowments across groups, for AFS gaps differences in returns to endowments have the largest explanatory power. Our findings suggest that, while related, unbanked and underbanked are distinct concepts with different underlying causes that may require different policy responses.

少数民族人口的无银行地位和替代金融服务的使用
摘要大量美国人没有银行账户(“无银行账户”)或依赖昂贵的替代金融服务(AFS),如发薪日贷款(“银行账户不足”),这对财富积累和退休准备有影响。使用原始数据,我们记录了无银行账户和频繁AFS使用率的巨大种族/民族差异。我们研究了社会经济地位(SES)、金融知识、对金融机构的信任、网络和时间偏好在解释这些差距中的作用。虽然这些变量解释了大部分白人少数群体在无银行账户状态下的差距,但AFS使用中的差距却并非如此。Blinder Oaxaca分解证实了这些模式:无银行账户状态的差距主要由不同群体的捐赠差异来解释,因为AFS差距捐赠回报率的差异具有最大的解释力。我们的研究结果表明,虽然有关联,但无银行账户和银行账户不足是不同的概念,有不同的根本原因,可能需要不同的政策回应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
29
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