Students' concern about indebtedness: a rank based social norms account

This paper describes a new model of students' concern about indebtedness within a rank-based social norms framework. Study 1 found that students hold highly variable beliefs about how much other students will owe at the end of their degree. Students' concern about their own anticipated debt – and their intention of taking on a part-time job during term time – was best predicted not by the size of the anticipated debt, but by how they, often incorrectly, believed their debt ranked amongst that of others. Study 2 manipulated hypothetical debt amounts experimentally and found that the same anticipated debt was rated as 2.5 times more concerning when it ranked as the second highest being considered than when it was the fifth highest. Study 3 demonstrated that the model applies to evaluation of different types of debt (income contingent loans versus general debt).

[1]  John Raffan,et al.  Worried women, complacent men? Gendered responses to differential student funding in higher education , 2008 .

[2]  Glenn Withers,et al.  Community Attitudes to Income Contingent Loans , 2009 .

[3]  A. Parducci The relativism of absolute judgements. , 1968, Scientific American.

[4]  N. Barr Student Loans: The Next Steps , 1989 .

[5]  A. Wood,et al.  Social norm influences on evaluations of the risks associated with alcohol consumption: applying the rank-based decision by sampling model to health judgments. , 2012, Alcohol and alcoholism.

[6]  Simon C. Moore,et al.  Money and Happiness , 2010, Psychological science.

[7]  John Maltby,et al.  How are personality judgments made? A cognitive model of reference group effects, personality scale responses, and behavioral reactions. , 2012, Journal of personality.

[8]  Moira Munro,et al.  Making Ends Meet: Student incomes and debt , 2001 .

[9]  H. Marsh,et al.  Natural anchoring at the neutral point of category rating scales , 1978 .

[10]  Gordon D. A. Brown,et al.  Decision by sampling , 2006, Cognitive Psychology.

[11]  Christopher Avery,et al.  Student Loans: Do College Students Borrow Too Much--Or Not Enough? , 2012 .

[12]  A. Parducci Category judgment: a range-frequency model. , 1965, Psychological review.

[13]  Moira Munro,et al.  Leaving university early: exploring the differences between continuing and non‐continuing students , 2004 .

[14]  Åsa Johansson,et al.  Intergenerational Social Mobility in OECD Countries , 2011 .

[15]  C. Rouse,et al.  Constrained after College: Student Loans and Early Career Occupational Choices , 2007 .

[16]  S. Lea,et al.  STUDENT ATTITUDES TO STUDENT DEBT , 1995 .

[17]  Claire Callender,et al.  The impact of term‐time employment on higher education students’ academic attainment and achievement , 2008 .

[18]  Noah J. Goldstein,et al.  The Constructive, Destructive, and Reconstructive Power of Social Norms , 2007, Psychological science.

[19]  D. Lloyd,et al.  Pain ratings reflect cognitive context: A range frequency model of pain perception , 2013, PAIN®.

[20]  Jacob Cohen Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences , 1969, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[21]  Annamaria Lusardi,et al.  Financial literacy and retirement planning in the United States* , 2011, Journal of Pension Economics and Finance.

[22]  Jonathan Jackson,et al.  Does the Fear of Debt Deter Students from Higher Education? , 2005, Journal of Social Policy.

[23]  R. H. Smith,et al.  Intrapersonal and social comparison determinants of happiness: a range-frequency analysis. , 1989, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  Janet Ford,et al.  Part-time work and full-time higher education , 1995 .

[25]  R. Easterlin Does Economic Growth Improve the Human Lot? Some Empirical Evidence , 1974 .

[26]  Bruce J. Chapman Government Managing Risk: Income Contingent Loans for Social and Economic Progress , 2006 .

[27]  Douglas H. Wedell,et al.  The Thick and the Thin of It: Contextual Effects in Body Perception , 2005 .

[28]  A. Lusardi,et al.  Debt literacy, financial experiences, and overindebtedness* , 2009, Journal of Pension Economics and Finance.

[29]  O. Chernyshenko,et al.  The structure of attitudes to student debt , 2010 .

[30]  Ivo Vlaev,et al.  Contextual effects on the perceived health benefits of exercise: the exercise rank hypothesis. , 2012, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.

[31]  M. Barkham,et al.  Student debt and its relation to student mental health , 2004 .

[32]  M. Hagerty Social comparisons of income in one's community: evidence from national surveys of income and happiness. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  A. Wood,et al.  Am I Abnormal? Relative Rank and Social Norm Effects in Judgments of Anxiety and Depression Symptom Severity , 2013 .

[34]  A. Wood,et al.  An evolutionary based social rank explanation of why low income predicts mental distress: a 17 year cohort study of 30,000 people. , 2012, Journal of affective disorders.

[35]  H. Christie,et al.  The Logic of Loans: students' perceptions of the costs and benefits of the student loan , 2003 .

[36]  H. Helson Adaptation-level as frame of reference for prediction of psychophysical data. , 1947, The American journal of psychology.

[37]  Eli Jones,et al.  Money Attitudes, Credit Card Use, and Compulsive Buying among American College Students. , 2001 .

[38]  David Kjellberg Measuring Expectations , 1999, Identification Problems in the Social Sciences.

[39]  T. Osberg,et al.  PERSONALITY FACTORS, MONEY ATTITUDES, FINANCIAL KNOWLEDGE, AND CREDIT-CARD DEBT IN COLLEGE STUDENTS , 2006 .

[40]  R. Calfee,et al.  Context effects in judgment: adaptation level as a function of the mean, midpoint, and median of the stimuli. , 1960, Journal of experimental psychology.

[41]  A. Oswald,et al.  Does Wage Rank Affect Employees Well-Being? , 2005 .

[42]  J. Jackson,et al.  Does the fear of debt constrain choice of university and subject of study? , 2008 .

[43]  Haiyang Chen,et al.  An analysis of personal financial literacy among college students , 1998 .

[44]  A. Wood,et al.  Thanks, but I'm used to better: a relative rank model of gratitude. , 2011, Emotion.