1995
DOI: 10.1300/j074v07n01_04
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Cited by 30 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The next stream of research was on retirement planning among women, which was a frequent topic from 1986 to 1996 (e.g., Perkins, 1995;Slevin & Wingrove, 1995;Holtmann et al, 1994;Van Arsdale & Newman, 1993;Hayes & Parker, 1993;Richardson, 1990;McKenna & Nickols, 1988). People have become more conscious over the years of the critical nature of future savings for the elderly, particularly women.…”
Section: Bibliometric Analysis Of Publication Outputmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The next stream of research was on retirement planning among women, which was a frequent topic from 1986 to 1996 (e.g., Perkins, 1995;Slevin & Wingrove, 1995;Holtmann et al, 1994;Van Arsdale & Newman, 1993;Hayes & Parker, 1993;Richardson, 1990;McKenna & Nickols, 1988). People have become more conscious over the years of the critical nature of future savings for the elderly, particularly women.…”
Section: Bibliometric Analysis Of Publication Outputmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People have become more conscious over the years of the critical nature of future savings for the elderly, particularly women. Nevertheless, because the conventional roles of women in society emphasise subordination, dependency, and nonparticipation (Perkins, 1995), interest in examining financial planning among retired women may have increased during that era.…”
Section: Bibliometric Analysis Of Publication Outputmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some studies show no differences (Hershey & Mowen, 2000; Rosenkoetter & Garris, 2001; Reitzes & Mutran, 2004), but others do find small discrepancies, with women planning less (Jacobs‐Lawson et al, 2004; Quick & Moen, 1998; Kim & Moen, 2001a; Kim & Moen, 2001b; Noone et al, 2010). Although women do more retirement planning compared to two decades ago, their overrepresentation in lower paid and nonunionized occupations with limited planning resources (O'Rand & Henretta, 1982; Kilty & Behling, 1986; Hayes & Parker, 1993; Muller et al, 2020), differences in financial literacy (Lusardi & Mitchell, 2008), lack of education about retirement (Perkins, 1995), and greater risk aversion (Agnew et al, 2003; Watson & McNaughton, 2007) may still contribute to some discrepancies. Women's financial retirement preparation is also related to home ownership, having longer planning horizons, and working for a large employer (Tamborini & Purcell, 2016).…”
Section: Findings Regarding Arpmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As documented in most literature, socio-demographic factors such as difference amongst gender, race, income, education, occupation, age and marital status undeniably have great influence on the perception of money management (Anderson et al, 2000;Glass & Kilpatrick, 1998b;Gregoire, Kilty, & Richardson, 2002). With regard to gender, Lee (2003) conjectures that gender differences have an impact on financial well-being; men tend to plan for wealth accumulation for later age compared to women (Glass & Kilpatrick, 1998b;Perkins, 1995;Richardson, 1990). Age is also a factor affecting financial well-being as most individuals do not make retirement plans until much later stage of their life (Anderson et al, 2000) and the older age brackets are more potential in financial well-being (Turner, Bailey, & Scott, 1994).…”
Section: Review Of Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%