01963nam a22002177a 450000500170000000800410001704000080005810000420006624500900010826000750019830000120027349000530028550011280033865000250146665000140149170000180150585600970152394200180162099900190163895200880165720250210104900.0250210b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d cLDD aOishi, Shigehiro et al. Komiya, Asuka aThe Socioecological Psychology of Financial Debts: bThe Role of Residential Mobility aUSA :bInternational Association For Cross-Cultural Psychology,c2024. bp. 3-24 aJournal Of Cross-Cultural PsychologyvVol. 55(1) aWe examined individual, regional, and cultural differences in household debts and identified residential mobility as a key socioecological variable at multiple levels of analysis. Study 1 found that American households’ debt rates were higher than Japanese debt rates. Across 76 countries, household debts were higher in residentially mobile countries than those in residentially stable ones (Study 2). Next, across 144 U.S. cities, residents of residentially mobile cities had more credit card debts than those of residentially stable cities (Study 3). We further replicated the international and U.S. findings across 366 districts in India (Study 4). Study 5 found that American participants were more residentially mobile and more willing to borrow than Japanese participants, and the willingness to borrow was partly explained by the personal history of residential mobility. Study 6 found that residentially mobile individuals felt less indebtedness/gratitude than residentially stable individuals; the study also found how indebtedness/gratitude impacted individuals’ credit card debts and willingness to borrow.  aResidential Mobility aBorrowing aKoo, Minkyung yclick here to access onlineuhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00220221231204221 2ddccARTICLES c194788d194788 r2025-02-10 10:49:14l0w2025-02-10yARTICLES102ddc407000aLDDbLDDd2025-02-10