Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/113958
Title: Fixing onlies versus advancing multiples : number of children and parents’ preferences for educational products
Authors: Wang, PX
Liang, C
Wang, Q 
Issue Date: Jul-2025
Source: Journal of marketing, July 2025, v. 89, no. 4, p. 21-38
Abstract: Due to a continuous decline in fertility rates in recent decades, the number of one-child families has been increasing in both developing and developed countries. Given this significant shift in family structure, it is imperative to investigate the complex dynamics of how the number of children within a family—whether it is a one-child family or a family with multiple children—affects parents’ decision-making in the realm of education. Using a mixed-method approach including seven main studies, among them a secondary data analysis (Study 1) and a field study (Study 2), and four supplementary studies, the authors consistently find that, compared with multichild parents, one-child parents have a stronger relative preference for deficit-based over strength-based educational products. Both mediation and moderation analyses suggest that this effect is driven by one-child parents’ heightened parenting prevention focus. The current research not only enriches our understanding of parenting dynamics, educational decision-making, and parenting regulatory focus but also has implications for a myriad of disciplines, including marketing, psychology, economics, and sociology. More importantly, it carries substantial implications for marketers, educators, and policy makers.
Keywords: Number of children
Educational products
Parenting regulatory focus
Deficit-based
Strength-based
Family structure
Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc.
Journal: Journal of marketing 
ISSN: 0022-2429
EISSN: 1547-7185
DOI: 10.1177/00222429241306009
Rights: This is the accepted version of the publication Wang, P. X., Liang, C., & Wang, Q. (2024). Fixing Onlies Versus Advancing Multiples: Number of Children and Parents’ Preferences for Educational Products. Journal of Marketing, 89(4), 21-38. Copyright © 2025 American Marketing Association. DOI: 10.1177/00222429241306009.
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