行动起来,解决问题:中国非婚同居青年的经济行为、权力(不)平衡和经济虐待

Xiaomin Li, Muhammad Aamir Khan, Jing Jian Xiao, Dexia Kong
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摘要

青壮年是遭受经济虐待--一种亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)--的高危人群,而非婚同居的中国青壮年尤其容易受到经济虐待。要减少经济虐待,需要回答的一个重要问题是:经济虐待与哪些因素有关?哪些因素与经济虐待有关?在控制了与经济虐待相关的因素(如人口统计学信息和其他类型的 IPV)后,我们研究了在非婚同居的中国青壮年中,财务行为(即个人的理财能力)与权力(不)平衡(即个人是否与恋爱伴侣分享平等的影响力)以及经济虐待之间的关系。我们还研究了经济行为、权力(不)平衡和经济虐待之间的关联是否因年轻人的性别和社会经济地位而异。我们使用 Qualtrics 调查收集了 445 名非婚同居的中国年轻人(53.3% 为男性,46.7% 为女性;22.7% 社会经济地位较低,77.3% 社会经济地位较高)的数据。我们建立了一个结构方程模型来检验研究兴趣之间的关联。我们发现,理财能力(如在预算范围内支出和跟踪支出)与权力平衡(个人与伴侣在决策过程中分享同等影响力)相关,反过来,也与较少遭受经济虐待的经历相关。这些关联在统计学上与性别和社会经济地位相关。总之,我们的研究结果表明,提高理财能力是减少非婚同居的中国年轻人遭受经济虐待的一个及时而新颖的途径,这可能是因为这一人群面临着普遍而严重的经济虐待,却普遍缺乏学习理财的机会。
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Actions for solutions: Financial behaviors, power (im)balance, and economic abuse among Chinese young adults in non-marital cohabitation
Young adults are at high risk of experiencing economic abuse—a form of intimate partner violence (IPV)—and Chinese young adults in non-marital cohabitation are especially vulnerable. To reduce economic abuse, an important question to answer is: What factors are associated with economic abuse? After controlling for constructs (e.g., demographic information and other types of IPV) that were linked to economic abuse, we investigated how financial behaviors (i.e., individuals’ money management capability) were associated with power (im)balance (i.e., whether individuals shared equal influence with the romantic partner) and, in turn, economic abuse among non-marital cohabitating Chinese young adults. We also investigated whether associations among financial behaviors, power (im)balance, and economic abuse varied across young adults’ gender and SES. We used a Qualtrics survey to collect data from 445 non-marital cohabitating Chinese young adults (53.3% male vs. 46.7% female; 22.7% lower socioeconomic status [SES] vs. 77.3% higher-SES). A structural equation model was conducted to test the associations of research interests. We found that money management capability (e.g., spending within budget and tracking expenses) is associated with balanced power—the individual sharing equal influence with the partner in the decision-making process—and, in turn, less experience of being economically abused. These associations were statistically equivalent across gender and SES. Collectively, our findings suggested that promoting money management capability be a timely and new avenue for reducing economic abuse among Chinese young adults in non-marital cohabitation, possibly because this population faces common and severe economic abuse but generally lacks the opportunity to learn money management.
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