Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 36 to 42.

Money habits matter a lot in a relationship, even if you’re not married or living together, concludes Melissa A Curran, an associate professor at the University of Arizona, in a new study published in the Journal of Family and Economic Issues. That’s why she recommends being picky when it comes to dating. “Young adults should choose their romantic partner wisely,” Curran tells CNBC Make It.

She and her colleagues assessed over 500 young twenty-somethings in committed relationships and had them rate their health and overall life satisfaction. She asked them questions related to their partners’ financial responsibility, such as, Do they spend within a budget? And, do they usually pay off their credit cards in full? The researchers found that the more responsible the participants perceived their partners to be with money, the higher their own sense of well-being and the happier they were with their relationships. The opposite was also true. Participants who thought their partners were bad with money had a lower sense of well-being and felt less committed to the relationship.

“This finding makes sense developmentally as the young adults are transitioning to adulthood,” says Curran. “It would make sense for them to draw upon romantic partners in terms of financial socialization agents.” By socialization agents, she means people who can teach and influence the participants on matters related to money. The idea is that the financial habits of whoever you’re dating can rub off on you. If your partner is bad with money, you might become bad with money too, which in turn affects your life overall, since the researchers also confirmed that your own financial habits definitely affect your well-being.

For many young adults, parents are the most influential socialization agents. So, in this study, Curran also asked the participants about what their parents expected of them when it came to their finances. Did their parents, for example, expect them to track their spending? The researchers found that high expectations from an involved parent led the participants to perform better on a financial literacy test. But, unlike romantic partners, they did not seem to influence well-being.

If you’re bothered by your significant other’s over-spending or general irresponsibility with money, Curran and her colleagues recommend talking things through. “Having discussions about finances and making financial decisions together helps couples become closer and more satisfied with their relationships.”

(Source: https://www.cnbc.com/)

According to paragraph 3, what can be generalized about the conclusion of the finding?

Đáp án đúng là: C
Giải thích
Theo đoạn 3, những gì có thể được khái quát từ kết luận của phát hiện này?
A. Nhận được hỗ trợ tài chính từ bạn đời của bạn là điều bình thường đối với mọi mối quan hệ
B. Thông minh về tiền bạc là món quà mà không phải ai cũng có trong cuộc sống
C. Hẹn hò với một người chi tiêu quá mức thực sự có thể làm giảm chất lượng cuộc sống của bạn
D. Tặng người thương những món quà đắt tiền sẽ làm tăng sự hài lòng trong mối quan hệ
Căn cứ vào thông tin đoạn ba:
If your partner is bad with money, you might become bad with money too, which in turn affects your life overall, since the researchers also confirmed that your own financial habits definitely affect your well-being.
(Nếu bạn đời của bạn không sử dụng tiền thông minh, bạn cũng có thể trở nên như vậy, điều này ảnh hưởng đến cuộc sống của bạn, vì các nhà nghiên cứu cũng xác nhận rằng thói quen tài chính của bạn chắc chắn ảnh hưởng đến hạnh phúc của bạn.)