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Selected characteristics of personal bankruptcy petitioners in Portland, Oregon

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Title Selected characteristics of personal bankruptcy petitioners in Portland, Oregon
Names Matsen, Shirley Suzanne (creator)
Miller, Dorothy Sherrill (advisor)
Date Issued 1966-05-27 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1967
Abstract Concern regarding the large numbers of personal bankruptcies
in Oregon prompted this study. Although information was available
from a few studies in other parts of the United States, none was
available for Oregon. Very little data has been collected on personal
and family characteristics of people filing bankruptcy and less
has been collected through personal interviews with the petitioners.
The two major objectives of this study were (1) to obtain data
about certain personal and family characteristics of a sample of
Oregon personal bankruptcy petitioners through the use of an interview
questionnaire and to attempt to determine if they were related to
financial characteristics obtained from official bankruptcy petitions and
(2) to compare selected socioeconomic characteristics of the sample
with Oregon and United States general population characteristics.
An interview questionnaire was administered to 50 personal
bankruptcy petitioners immediately following the first creditor hearing
for each case in the bankruptcy court in Portland, Oregon in February
1966. Other data were secured from the bankruptcy petitions. The
study required cooperation of the Federal Referees in Bankruptcy,
attorneys handling each case and the petitioners themselves.
Personal and family information obtained from the petitioner
questionnaire included: sex; age class; occupation classification;
employment status; marital status; length of time married; length
of time divorced or separated; number of times petitioner had married;
age class of spouse; family size; number of children; stage in
family life cycle; employment status of spouse; bankruptcy history;
petitioner and spouse education; social class; incidence of threatened
and/or actual garnishment; number and type of solutions to financial
problems sought before petitioning for bankruptcy; period of highest
debt level; reason for highest debt level; number and type of primary
reasons for filing bankruptcy petition; type of area in which petitioner
lived during first 14 years of life; degree of expressed marital happiness;
degree of influence of financial problems on marital happiness;
responsibility for bill payment; and degree of expressed husband-wife
agreement regarding expenditures.
Financial information obtained from bankruptcy petitions filed
with the court included income for last available year, total amount
of debt, amount and percentage of secured, unsecured and assigned
debt and number and percentage of secured, unsecured and assigned creditors. Debts were classified into 23 creditor classifications
according to purpose of the debt.
Statistical description included frequency distributions, ranges,
means and medians. A t-test of significance was run for petitioner
characteristics with mean debt and mean income. A multiple correlation
using age class, family size, stage in family life cycle, mean
income and mean debt was calculated.
Results of the study indicated a significant correlation (P = .01)
between mean debt and mean income. Among other findings are the
following median personal, family and financial characteristics of the
petitioners: male, 28 years old, married, two children, child bearing
stage of family life cycle, twelfth grade education, semiskilled
employee, income for last available year of $4,950 and total debt of
$4,831 owed 16.5 creditors. Over 75 percent of the petitioners owed
medical and automobile expenses.
Findings regarding degree of expressed marital happiness, degree
of influence of financial problems on marital happiness and degree
of expressed husband-wife agreement regarding expenditures,
although not conclusive, suggest trends which indicate the need for
further research.
Care must be taken not to generalize from the results since
reliability and validity have not been established.
Suggestions for further research regarding bankruptcy include
expansion of interview technique and total sample size, study of
financial management practices of bankrupts following bankruptcy
release, study of creditor orientation to bankruptcy, a longitudinal
study of family structure and personal traits as they relate to financial
management.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Bankruptcy
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47800

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