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A01=Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke
A01=Paul Webley
Anna Emilia Berti
Author_Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke
Author_Paul Webley
behaviour
Board Game Studies
Board Games
boxes
Category=JMC
child financial behaviour
Children's Economic
children's practical saving behaviour
Children's Saving
Children’s Economic
Children’s Saving
cognitive development economics
Cognitive Developmental Approach
Cognitive Developmental Studies
Common Language
Confers
constraint
De Beni
developmental economic psychology
economic
economic socialisation
economy
Edmund J. S. Sonuga-Barke
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
Follow
functional
Functional Saving
Hold
income
Income Constraint
income limitation coping
Institutionalised Saving
Keynes
money
Paul Webley
Piggy Bank
play
Play Economy
Pocket Money
resource allocation strategies
Savings Boxes
Savings Habit
Sharone L. Maital
Shlomo Maital
Social Exchange Theory Framework
Subjective Interest Rates
Sweet Shop
understanding
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138088498
  • Weight: 470g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Dec 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1993, this book presents an alternative approach to the study of the emergence of economic awareness during childhood: a new developmental economic psychology!

In the past, attempts to study the emergence of children’s economic consciousness have failed to take account of the practical nature of the "economic" in the history of western cultures. Economic socialisation has been seen as the acquisition of abstract knowledge about the institutions of adult economic culture. The child has been seen as a spectator, acquiring knowledge of that culture, but never really a part of it.

However, economic actions, in essence, are directed not towards the attainment of knowledge, but rather towards the practical solution of problems of resource allocation imposed by constraint. Children, just like adults, are faced with practical problems of resource allocation. Their response to these problems may be different from those of adults but no less "economic" for that.

This realisation forms the heart of this book. In it children are seen as both inhabitants of their own "playground" economic subculture and actors in the wider economic world of adults, solving, or attempting to solve, practical economic problems.

In order to highlight this "child-centred" approach, the authors studied the way children tackle the particular problems posed by limitations of income. How do children learn (a) the relationship between choices available in the present and the future, (b) to spread their limited financial resources over time into the future and (c) about the strategies, such as banking, that allow them to protect those resources from threats and temptations? In short, how do children learn to save?

This volume goes some way to answering these and related questions and in so doing sets up an alternative framework for the study of the emergence of economic awareness.

Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J.S.; Webley, Paul

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