Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo investigate whether family hardiness mediates the relationship between economic hardship and hope of mothers and children from low‐income families.BackgroundEconomic hardship has been found to be associated with lower hope in adults. The ABC‐X model suggests that the resources available could be a mediator of this relationship. However, there is a lack of studies investigating family‐level hardiness as a potential mediator of this relationship in low‐income families.MethodMother–child dyads (N = 512) from low‐income families in Singapore were surveyed. Simple mediation was conducted to investigate family hardiness as a mediator between economic hardship and hope of mothers and children. Significant simple mediation results were followed up with parallel mediation, with family commitment, challenge, and control as mediators.ResultsFamily challenge accounted for the mediation effect in mothers, whereas global family hardiness accounted for the mediation effect observed in children.ConclusionThe inability of low‐income families to adapt and reorganize their family system in response to their economic situation could account for lowered hope in mothers. Children's hope is affected by economic hardship through global family hardiness, possibly due to undifferentiated perception of the construct.ImplicationsInterventions that build up family hardiness are recommended to practitioners.

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