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Saving Can Save from Death Anxiety: Mortality Salience and Financial Decision-Making

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  • Tomasz Zaleskiewicz
  • Agata Gasiorowska
  • Pelin Kesebir

Abstract

Four studies tested the idea that saving money can buffer death anxiety and constitute a more effective buffer than spending money. Saving can relieve future-related anxiety and provide people with a sense of control over their fate, thereby rendering death thoughts less threatening. Study 1 found that participants primed with both saving and spending reported lower death fear than controls. Saving primes, however, were associated with significantly lower death fear than spending primes. Study 2 demonstrated that mortality primes increase the attractiveness of more frugal behaviors in save-or-spend dilemmas. Studies 3 and 4 found, in two different cultures (Polish and American), that the activation of death thoughts prompts people to allocate money to saving as opposed to spending. Overall, these studies provided evidence that saving protects from existential anxiety, and probably more so than spending.

Suggested Citation

  • Tomasz Zaleskiewicz & Agata Gasiorowska & Pelin Kesebir, 2013. "Saving Can Save from Death Anxiety: Mortality Salience and Financial Decision-Making," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 8(11), pages 1-10, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0079407
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079407
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Joanna Rudzinska-Wojciechowska, 2017. "If you want to save, focus on the forest rather than on trees. The effects of shifts in levels of construal on saving decisions," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(5), pages 1-18, May.
    2. S. Venus Jin & Ehri Ryu, 2022. "“The greedy I that gives”—The paradox of egocentrism and altruism: Terror management and system justification perspectives on the interrelationship between mortality salience and charitable donations ," Journal of Consumer Affairs, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 56(1), pages 414-448, March.
    3. Dominika Maison & Marta Marchlewska & Katarzyna Sekścińska & Joanna Rudzinska-Wojciechowska & Filip Łozowski, 2019. "You don’t have to be rich to save money: On the relationship between objective versus subjective financial situation and having savings," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(4), pages 1-15, April.

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