Template-type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0
Author-Name: Donato Masciandaro
Title: Politicians, Trust and Financial Literacy:
When Do Politicians Care?
Abstract: Politicians can be more or less active in pursuing financial-literacy policies. This paper explores the role of financial-literacy policy in modifying the financial-trust endowment of a given population taking the political cost-benefit analysis into account. As, in any period, each incumbent government can design and implement its own financial-literacy policy and as financial-literacy deficits are more likely in a period of financial innovation, we assume that constituencies more or less in favour of such policies are present in a given country. If this is the case, we can show that, in a democracy with political competition, the level of activism in implementing financial-literacy policies is positively associated with financial-instability risks, literacy benefits, and illiteracy costs. Moreover, preferences and constraints motivate the politician in charge. More specifically, a more longer time horizons, lower psychological attitudes towards the status quo, and a higher probability of re-election can increase financial-literacy efforts.
Classification-JEL:  D72, G28 , G53 , H10 , K00 
Keywords: financial literacy, financial trust, fintech, financial crisis, loss aversion, political competition
Length: 15
Number: 23206
Creation-Date: 2023
File-URL: https://repec.unibocconi.it/baffic/baf/papers/cbafwp23206.pdf
File-Format: application/pdf
File-Size: 
Handle: RePEc:baf:cbafwp:cbafwp23206
