Top New Year's resolution: Save
more
Financial issues make it onto more
resolution lists this year, survey shows.
November 17 2006: 3:49 PM EST
NEW
YORK (Money Magazine) -- More than a third of
Americans are planning to make a financial change as their New Year's
resolution for 2007, according to a new survey by Money Magazine and market
research firm ICR.
The survey showed that 37 percent of Americans plan to make a New Year's
resolution involving finances - in the past, just 23
percent of respondents had made such resolutions.
The top financial resolutions were planning to save more (32 percent) and
paying down debt (25 percent).
Americans most likely to make a financial resolution for 2007 are younger
(27 percent), renting their home (29 percent), are African Americans (37
percent), and not married (24 percent).
The survey also showed that of those who have made financial resolutions in
the past, only 24 percent were successful.
The Money/ICR poll was conducted by telephone with a nationally
representative sample of 1026 Americans between November 8th
- 12th, 2006. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.1 percentage
points.
ABOUT THE POLL
The Money/ICR poll was conducted by telephone with a
nationally representative sample of 1026 Americans between November
8th - 12th, 2006. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.1
percentage points.
The poll was
conducted using ICRs telephone omnibus survey of
adults age 18 and over. ICR is one of the nation's leading market and
opinion research firms and is headquartered in Media, PA.
For more information on this methodology please go to: http://www.icrsurvey.com.
MONEY,
published by Time Inc., is the nations largest financial publication with a
circulation of 1.9 million and a total readership over 7 million.