Does product familiarity matter for participation?

Household access to financial products is often conditioned on previous use.
However, banning access when learning is possible may be discriminatory or counterproductive.
The ‘experiment’ of German reunification (exogenously) offered to East
Germans unconditional access to (exogenously) unfamiliar capitalist products.
Controlling for characteristics, East Germans participated immediately, were as likely to use unfamiliar risky securities as West Germans, and more likely to use consumer debt, without signs of regret. Our results suggest that mistakes of unfamiliar households can be prevented by a knowledgeable and well-incentivized financial
sector and by interaction with familiar peers. This implies that regulation should refocus on the financial sector rather than on prohibiting individuals to gain familiarity with financial products.

A revised version of this paper is available here.

Netspar, Network for Studies on Pensions, Aging and Retirement, is a thinktank and knowledge network. Netspar is dedicated to promoting a wider understanding of the economic and social implications of pensions, aging and retirement in the Netherlands and Europe.

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