The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

StandardStandard

The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians. / Gignac, Gilles; Gepp, Adrian; O'Neill, Terence J et al.
Yn: Social Indicators Research, Cyfrol 171, 27.12.2023, t. 655-675.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Gignac, G, Gepp, A, O'Neill, TJ & Xue, R 2023, 'The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians', Social Indicators Research, cyfrol. 171, tt. 655-675. <http://10.1007/s11205-023-03272-w>

APA

Gignac, G., Gepp, A., O'Neill, T. J., & Xue, R. (2023). The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians. Social Indicators Research, 171, 655-675. http://10.1007/s11205-023-03272-w

CBE

Gignac G, Gepp A, O'Neill TJ, Xue R. 2023. The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians. Social Indicators Research. 171:655-675.

MLA

Gignac, Gilles et al. "The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians". Social Indicators Research. 2023, 171. 655-675.

VancouverVancouver

Gignac G, Gepp A, O'Neill TJ, Xue R. The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians. Social Indicators Research. 2023 Rhag 27;171:655-675.

Author

Gignac, Gilles ; Gepp, Adrian ; O'Neill, Terence J et al. / The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians. Yn: Social Indicators Research. 2023 ; Cyfrol 171. tt. 655-675.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Impact of Housing Tenure on Financial Wellbeing Among Elderly Australians

AU - Gignac, Gilles

AU - Gepp, Adrian

AU - O'Neill, Terence J

AU - Xue, Rui

PY - 2023/12/27

Y1 - 2023/12/27

N2 - Homeownership rates are declining in many countries and the potential impact on financial wellbeing is largely unknown. Additionally, the potential impact may be expected to be larger for women than men, as women tend to value homeownership more than men. Finally, financial literacy may play a role on financial wellbeing via a positive effect onto housing tenure (i.e., renter, mortgagor, outright homeowner). On the basis of a community sample of older Australians (N = 2608), we tested a model with housing tenure as a predictor of financial wellbeing, controlling for the effects of wealth, income, age, and marital status. Housing tenure yielded a significant, positive, unique effect onto financial wellbeing. We failed to find evidence that the effect of housing tenure on financial wellbeing was larger for women than men. Finally, financial literacy was associated positively with financial wellbeing; and, the effect was entirely mediated positively by housing tenure, wealth and income. We conclude that outright homeownership may accord approximately 10% greater financial wellbeing than renting (and ≈ 6% greater than mortgaged) in Australian seniors. Furthermore, higher levels of financial literacy may play a unique role in facilitating better housing tenure.

AB - Homeownership rates are declining in many countries and the potential impact on financial wellbeing is largely unknown. Additionally, the potential impact may be expected to be larger for women than men, as women tend to value homeownership more than men. Finally, financial literacy may play a role on financial wellbeing via a positive effect onto housing tenure (i.e., renter, mortgagor, outright homeowner). On the basis of a community sample of older Australians (N = 2608), we tested a model with housing tenure as a predictor of financial wellbeing, controlling for the effects of wealth, income, age, and marital status. Housing tenure yielded a significant, positive, unique effect onto financial wellbeing. We failed to find evidence that the effect of housing tenure on financial wellbeing was larger for women than men. Finally, financial literacy was associated positively with financial wellbeing; and, the effect was entirely mediated positively by housing tenure, wealth and income. We conclude that outright homeownership may accord approximately 10% greater financial wellbeing than renting (and ≈ 6% greater than mortgaged) in Australian seniors. Furthermore, higher levels of financial literacy may play a unique role in facilitating better housing tenure.

M3 - Article

VL - 171

SP - 655

EP - 675

JO - Social Indicators Research

JF - Social Indicators Research

SN - 0303-8300

ER -