We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investments by testing the hypothesis that marriage represents – in a portfolio framework – a sort of safe asset and that this attribute may change over time. We show that married individuals have a higher propensity to invest in risky assets than single ones, that this marital status gap is stronger for women and that, for women only, it evolves and declines at the end of the sample period. Next we explore a number of possible explanations of the observed gender differences by controlling for background factors that capture the evolution of family and society. We find that both the higher female marital status gap and its time variability vanish for those women who ...
Aydogan Ulker analyses the role of the elderly couples\u27 past marital history in determining their...
We relate an observed difference between single men (SM) and single women (SW) in attitudes towards ...
Previous research has demonstrated that women have greater risk aversion than men. Controlling for a...
We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investments by testing the hypot...
We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investment by testing the hypoth...
We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investments by testing the hypot...
We study the impact of gender and marital status on financial decisions using the 1989-2006 Bank of ...
We study the impact of gender and marital status on financial decisions using the 1989-2006 Bank of ...
We investigate how changes in marital status affect the decision to take on financial risks. As an a...
The present study offers an alternative explanation for the so-called gender and marital (cohabitati...
We link causally the riskiness of men's management of their finances with the probability of their e...
This paper presents a series of path models that were developed to test whether financial risk toler...
This paper investigates the impact of demographic shocks on optimal decisions about saving, life ins...
Aydogan Ulker analyses the role of the elderly couples\u27 past marital history in determining their...
We relate an observed difference between single men (SM) and single women (SW) in attitudes towards ...
Previous research has demonstrated that women have greater risk aversion than men. Controlling for a...
We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investments by testing the hypot...
We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investment by testing the hypoth...
We study the joint impact of gender and marital status on financial investments by testing the hypot...
We study the impact of gender and marital status on financial decisions using the 1989-2006 Bank of ...
We study the impact of gender and marital status on financial decisions using the 1989-2006 Bank of ...
We investigate how changes in marital status affect the decision to take on financial risks. As an a...
The present study offers an alternative explanation for the so-called gender and marital (cohabitati...
We link causally the riskiness of men's management of their finances with the probability of their e...
This paper presents a series of path models that were developed to test whether financial risk toler...
This paper investigates the impact of demographic shocks on optimal decisions about saving, life ins...
Aydogan Ulker analyses the role of the elderly couples\u27 past marital history in determining their...
We relate an observed difference between single men (SM) and single women (SW) in attitudes towards ...
Previous research has demonstrated that women have greater risk aversion than men. Controlling for a...