Harnessing Emotional Connections to Improve Financial Decisions: Evaluating the Impact of Financial Education in Mainstream Media
This paper exploits the emotional connections and viewer attentiveness of mainstream media to evaluate the economic impact of financial education messages on debt management delivered through a popular television soap opera in South Africa. The stu...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, D.C.
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/04/17561771/harnessing-emotional-connections-improve-financial-decisions-evaluating-impact-financial-education-mainstream-media http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14445 |
Summary: | This paper exploits the emotional
connections and viewer attentiveness of mainstream media to
evaluate the economic impact of financial education messages
on debt management delivered through a popular television
soap opera in South Africa. The study uses a symmetric
encouragement design to compare outcomes of individuals who
were randomly assigned to watch a soap opera with financial
messages, "Scandal!" to those of individuals who
were invited to watch a similar soap opera without financial
messages, "Muvhango." Both shows overlapped in
evening primetime and had similar past viewership profiles.
The financial storyline spanned two months and featured one
of the leading characters of the show borrowing excessively
and irresponsibly through hire-purchase, gambling, and
ending up in financial distress; and eventually seeking help
to find her way out. Two intermediate and one final
follow-up surveys were conducted as part of the study. The
analysis finds individuals assigned to watch Scandal had
significantly higher financial knowledge of the issues
highlighted in the soap opera storyline, in particular
messages delivered by the leading character. On behavior,
Scandal viewers were almost twice more likely to borrow from
formal sources, less likely to engage in gambling, and less
prone to enter hire purchase agreements. Messages promoting
a national debt mediation helpline delivered by an external
character did not sustain traction beyond immediate
interest. Three qualitative focus groups highlight the
importance of emotional connections with the leading
character in motivating behavior change. |
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