Publication | Closed Access
Testing a Measurement Model of Financial Capability Among Youth in Ghana
46
Citations
34
References
2014
Year
Economic DevelopmentEducationMeasurement ModelFinancial PracticePsychologySocioemotional DevelopmentFinancial SecurityYouth Well-beingFinancial CapabilityAfrican DevelopmentEconomicsPopulation YouthFinancial EducationLoansAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentFinancial WellbeingFinanceYouth Financial CapabilityChild DevelopmentAdolescent CognitionFinancial KnowledgeBusinessFinancial InclusionConsumer FinanceFinancing
Youth may benefit from having enhanced financial knowledge and skills and access to financial services to help them navigate transitions to adulthood, though reliable and valid measures of youth financial capability to help assess financial education and inclusion intervention outcomes are lacking. Using survey responses from 5,451 youth ages 12–18 in Ghana, we used exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis to assess 18 survey items concerning youth financial behavior and understanding and attitudes concerning financial services. A 12‐item, group invariant scale ( α = .72) with three latent factors was retained in a well‐fitting model that may help practitioners assess financial education and inclusion outcomes. We found that six items were poor indicators of youth financial capability, possibly because these items measure other constructs like numeracy, or because these items were not sufficiently assessed for developmental and cultural validity using qualitative methods like cognitive interviewing.
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