Abstract

With student loan borrowing becoming an increasingly common experience in U.S. households, it is crucial to understand the interpersonal manifestation of education debt within family systems. This study sought to understand how accruing and repaying student loan debt for one’s own higher education relates to family dynamics and communication within families. Leveraging Family Communication Patterns Theory, this study asked: How do student loan borrowers describe loan-related family communication patterns prior to loan accrual and during the repayment period? Utilizing qualitative and quantitative data collected through a concurrent nested mixed methods study design, findings from this study profile family communication typologies leading up to, and during, student loan repayment. Study findings suggest that the ways in which families communicate about student loans prior to loan accrual and during repayment (a) relate to family financial socialization processes and (b) play at least a partial role in how they experience student loans as part of their overall family dynamics. This study proposes a model of loan-related family communication dynamics and offers implications for future scholarship and practice.

Highlights

  • Defined, financial socialization is a process through which individuals cultivate financial knowledge, attitudes, norms, and personal styles of management and behaviors, all of which contribute to financial wellbeing (Danes, 1994; Gudmunson et al, 2016; Kim & Chatterjee, 2013)

  • Building on previous family financial socialization research, this study explores how student loan borrowers communicate about student loans within their family system of origin

  • Qualitative results paint a complex picture of loan-related family communication and decision-making dynamics leading up to loan accrual

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Summary

Introduction

Financial socialization is a process through which individuals cultivate financial knowledge, attitudes, norms, and personal styles of management and behaviors, all of which contribute to financial wellbeing (Danes, 1994; Gudmunson et al, 2016; Kim & Chatterjee, 2013). Within the specific context of family systems, financial socialization is predominantly regarded as a non-purposive process that manifests from daily interaction patterns (Gudmunson & Danes, 2011; Jorgensen & Savla, 2010). More specific to student loans, previous research suggests that characteristics of a borrower’s family of origin are the most influential factor in their ability to pay for higher education, and their potential need to take on loans (Akers & Chingos, 2016; Furquim et al, 2017; Houle, 2014; Jackson & Reynolds, 2013; Kim et al, 2017; Lee & Mueller, 2014). In 32% of the families who had borrowed, only the student borrowed; in 14%, only the parent(s) borrowed; in the remaining 7%, both student and parent(s) borrowed

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