Beyond Reasonable Debt Part 1: A background report of the indebtedness of New Zealand families

Beyond Reasonable Debt Part 1: A background report…
01 Dec 2008
pdf

The Families Commission and Retirement Commission carried out joint research on the indebtedness of New Zealand individuals and families. This background report identifies some of the key characteristics and trends around indebtedness.

 

Purpose

The purpose of this report is to provide the Families Commission and the Retirement Commission with a sound basis for any future work on the issue of families’ indebtedness. Neither Commission wants to discourage the positive use of debt. Both want to understand how New Zealand families approach debt and determine factors that influence whether the experience will be positive or negative. 

 We want to be able to address the following questions:

• How can families operate better in a financial environment with fewer borrowing constraints?

• What lessons can we learn or have we already learnt from recent market fluctuations.

Key Results

In this paper we have singled out several areas for future research:

1. Define and identify families who are in or close to a problem debt situation. The Livings Standard Survey (LSS) dataset offers the most potential for determining both outcomes and explanatory variables. (Note that multivariate analysis of the LSS dataset for this purpose will be undertaken by the Families and Retirement Commissions in 2008/09.)

2. Mortgage debt of older people has noticeably increased in the past decade. It would be worth exploring whether this is because they are borrowing more, or because more older people are entering (or re-entering) the mortgage market. Data from the Household Economic Survey (HES) or the Survey of Family, Income and Employment (SoFIE) should shed some light on this research question.

3. There is evidence in the United Kingdom of a positive, causal relationship between relationship breakdown and over-indebtedness. It would be interesting to explore whether this is the case in New Zealand. LSS and SoFIE data may be useful for exploring this research question.

4. Determine whether income is also a strong indicator of problem debt in New Zealand. LSS and SoFIE data should be suitable for this analysis.

5. There is little evidence linking ethnicity with indebtedness or over-indebtedness. In New Zealand, however, Māori and Pacific families have high debt-asset ratios compared to European families. This relationship would be worth exploring further if the effects of significant confounding factors like age and income could be held constant.

6. Evidence suggests that savings and debt decisions are influenced by various personality and environmental variables, which may result in the development of habits, heuristics and coping mechanisms. Identifying these variables and understanding what influences them may help us predict and influence financial behaviour. Environmental variables are particularly appealing because they may be more amenable to change. The role that family, parenting and communication styles play in consumer socialisation, and in family decision-making more generally, has emerged as a significant research gap.

7. Having an external locus of control, basing aspirations on comparison with others or having poor self-control (a tendency to be impulsive) tend to make a person more likely to have a spending than a saving habit. These traits may be significant factors influencing whether a family becomes financially better or worse off over time. Further research is required, however, to determine whether these relationships hold ex ante – that is, before people become indebted. Further research on gender and age differences in these variables is also required, as is an understanding of the interplay between these variables in a group or family decision-making setting. For example, where in a two-parent family one partner has an internal locus of control and the other an external one, it may be in the family’s long-term interests for each to be aware of their tendencies, strengths and weaknesses and to empower the partner with the internal locus of control to make decisions about the family’s finances.

Page last modified: 15 Mar 2018