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A Study in Economic Psychology: Children's Saving in a Play Economy

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A Study in Economic Psychology: Children's Saving in a Play Economy. / Webley, Paul; Levine, Mark; Lewis, Alan.
In: Human Relations, Vol. 44, No. 2, 01.01.1991, p. 127-146.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Webley P, Levine M, Lewis A. A Study in Economic Psychology: Children's Saving in a Play Economy. Human Relations. 1991 Jan 1;44(2):127-146. doi: 10.1177/001872679104400202

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Webley, Paul ; Levine, Mark ; Lewis, Alan. / A Study in Economic Psychology : Children's Saving in a Play Economy. In: Human Relations. 1991 ; Vol. 44, No. 2. pp. 127-146.

Bibtex

@article{5dd498e4e64e4ffcabd2a8ecc8bd5564,
title = "A Study in Economic Psychology: Children's Saving in a Play Economy",
abstract = "Economic Psychology extends the study of psychology and, in this case, the investigation of the socialization process in the economic realm. Thirty children, ten each aged 6, 9, and 12, took part in a “play economy” which consisted of four adjoining rooms, representing opportunities to save (one room was a “bank”) or temptation to spend, e.g., another room contained a sweet shop with real sweets. Children were given 90 tokens over the period of the game and had to save 70 in order to purchase a desired toy which had been chosen at the outset. This study was designed as an extension of an earlier one which used a more restricted environment (a board game). The results took two forms: (1) a simple analysis of the “success” rates of children in terms of their saving, and (2) the recording of children's own constructions of the play economy and of savings behavior, based on their verbal accounts and explanations. While the results showed a predictable pattern of increased understanding of savings (especially institutional saving) and improved savings “success” rates with increasing age, the information gathered from the accounts showed that younger children developed “rational” strategies which were not necessarily inferior when viewed in a wider social context.",
keywords = "children's saving, economic psychology",
author = "Paul Webley and Mark Levine and Alan Lewis",
year = "1991",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/001872679104400202",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
pages = "127--146",
journal = "Human Relations",
issn = "0018-7267",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Study in Economic Psychology

T2 - Children's Saving in a Play Economy

AU - Webley, Paul

AU - Levine, Mark

AU - Lewis, Alan

PY - 1991/1/1

Y1 - 1991/1/1

N2 - Economic Psychology extends the study of psychology and, in this case, the investigation of the socialization process in the economic realm. Thirty children, ten each aged 6, 9, and 12, took part in a “play economy” which consisted of four adjoining rooms, representing opportunities to save (one room was a “bank”) or temptation to spend, e.g., another room contained a sweet shop with real sweets. Children were given 90 tokens over the period of the game and had to save 70 in order to purchase a desired toy which had been chosen at the outset. This study was designed as an extension of an earlier one which used a more restricted environment (a board game). The results took two forms: (1) a simple analysis of the “success” rates of children in terms of their saving, and (2) the recording of children's own constructions of the play economy and of savings behavior, based on their verbal accounts and explanations. While the results showed a predictable pattern of increased understanding of savings (especially institutional saving) and improved savings “success” rates with increasing age, the information gathered from the accounts showed that younger children developed “rational” strategies which were not necessarily inferior when viewed in a wider social context.

AB - Economic Psychology extends the study of psychology and, in this case, the investigation of the socialization process in the economic realm. Thirty children, ten each aged 6, 9, and 12, took part in a “play economy” which consisted of four adjoining rooms, representing opportunities to save (one room was a “bank”) or temptation to spend, e.g., another room contained a sweet shop with real sweets. Children were given 90 tokens over the period of the game and had to save 70 in order to purchase a desired toy which had been chosen at the outset. This study was designed as an extension of an earlier one which used a more restricted environment (a board game). The results took two forms: (1) a simple analysis of the “success” rates of children in terms of their saving, and (2) the recording of children's own constructions of the play economy and of savings behavior, based on their verbal accounts and explanations. While the results showed a predictable pattern of increased understanding of savings (especially institutional saving) and improved savings “success” rates with increasing age, the information gathered from the accounts showed that younger children developed “rational” strategies which were not necessarily inferior when viewed in a wider social context.

KW - children's saving

KW - economic psychology

U2 - 10.1177/001872679104400202

DO - 10.1177/001872679104400202

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84973809776

VL - 44

SP - 127

EP - 146

JO - Human Relations

JF - Human Relations

SN - 0018-7267

IS - 2

ER -