The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being

Covid-19 and the unprecedented surge in financial technology contributed to unexpected financial challenges, affecting the relevance of f inancial decision making and perceived financial well-being. This paper examines the mediating effects of digital financial literacy, financial autonomy, financia...

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Main Author: Kumar, Parul (author)
Other Authors: Pillai, Rekha (author), Kumar, Neha (author), I. Tabash, Mosab (author)
Published: 2023
Online Access:https://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/3754
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author Kumar, Parul
author2 Pillai, Rekha
Kumar, Neha
I. Tabash, Mosab
author2_role author
author
author
author_facet Kumar, Parul
Pillai, Rekha
Kumar, Neha
I. Tabash, Mosab
author_role author
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Kumar, Parul
Pillai, Rekha
Kumar, Neha
I. Tabash, Mosab
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2023-11-16
2026-01-22T09:58:08Z
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv https://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/3754
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv en_US
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Article
description Covid-19 and the unprecedented surge in financial technology contributed to unexpected financial challenges, affecting the relevance of f inancial decision making and perceived financial well-being. This paper examines the mediating effects of digital financial literacy, financial autonomy, financial capability, and impulsivity on financial decision making and perceived financial well-being. The data come from 512 re spondents in Delhi/NCR (National Capital Region), India, using a snowball-sampling technique and partial least squares structural equation modeling to test 13 structural hypotheses with SmartPLS3.3. Partial least squares (PLS) prediction is employed to estimate the out-of-sample predictive power of the proposed model. Our findings reveal that skills directly affect financial decision making and perceived financial well being, and digital financial literacy emerges as a direct and mediating predictor of financial decision making. The dominance of financial capability and financial autonomy as mediators in financial decision making and financial well-being become more evident, and impulsivity fails to have mediating effects on financial decision making. The results have academic, regulatory, and managerial implications, all of which calls for more concerted efforts at recognizing the unique interaction among skills—financial decision making—perceived financial well-being, the cu mulative effect of which enhances the critical ability to deal with environmental challenges, manage socioeconomic pressures in a sustainable manner, and translate the benefits into prudent gender-specific policy decisions and practices.
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publishDate 2023
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spelling The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-beingKumar, ParulPillai, RekhaKumar, NehaI. Tabash, MosabCovid-19 and the unprecedented surge in financial technology contributed to unexpected financial challenges, affecting the relevance of f inancial decision making and perceived financial well-being. This paper examines the mediating effects of digital financial literacy, financial autonomy, financial capability, and impulsivity on financial decision making and perceived financial well-being. The data come from 512 re spondents in Delhi/NCR (National Capital Region), India, using a snowball-sampling technique and partial least squares structural equation modeling to test 13 structural hypotheses with SmartPLS3.3. Partial least squares (PLS) prediction is employed to estimate the out-of-sample predictive power of the proposed model. Our findings reveal that skills directly affect financial decision making and perceived financial well being, and digital financial literacy emerges as a direct and mediating predictor of financial decision making. The dominance of financial capability and financial autonomy as mediators in financial decision making and financial well-being become more evident, and impulsivity fails to have mediating effects on financial decision making. The results have academic, regulatory, and managerial implications, all of which calls for more concerted efforts at recognizing the unique interaction among skills—financial decision making—perceived financial well-being, the cu mulative effect of which enhances the critical ability to deal with environmental challenges, manage socioeconomic pressures in a sustainable manner, and translate the benefits into prudent gender-specific policy decisions and practices.2026-01-22T09:58:08Z2023-11-16Articlehttps://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/3754en_USoai:bspace.buid.ac.ae:1234/37542026-01-29T13:55:31Z
spellingShingle The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
Kumar, Parul
title The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
title_full The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
title_fullStr The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
title_full_unstemmed The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
title_short The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
title_sort The interplay of skills, digital financial literacy, capability, and autonomy in f inancial decision making and well-being
url https://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/3754