Education, upbringing, and self-control are thought to drive a person's savings habits, and now scientists have found that people also save more when they feel powerful.
"We were interested in knowing whether the decision to save or not save money was affected by how someone was feeling during the time they were making a savings decision," researchers said in the study published in the Journal of Consumer Research.
Across five studies, Emily N Garbinsky and Jennifer Aaker from Stanford University, and Anne-Kathrin Klesse from Tilburg University, found that when made to feel powerful, the amount of money someone is willing to save for the future increases.
All participants were asked to respond to some questions and were then given the option to either collect their study compensation in cash or to put it in a lab savings account.
Results showed that the individuals who sat in the tall chair saved more of their money than those who sat on the low ottoman.
Another study found that making people feel powerful only increases saving when they are told they will be saving money to keep it or when they are not given a specific reason to save.
Companies offering financial services like retirement planning can use these results to help their customers prepare for the future, including the creation of more effective intervention strategies, researchers said.
"People who feel powerful use saving money as a means to maintain their current state of power. When saving no longer affords individuals the opportunity to maintain power, the effect of power on saving disappears," the researchers concluded.
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