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Ageing populations, financial capability and household financial decision-making in the context of neoliberal social policy systems

In: A Research Agenda for Financial Resources within the Household

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  • Debora Price

Abstract

There has been little focus on older people within studies of household money, although we know money relations remain highly gendered. The extent to which this matters depends in part on how far the wider financial, political and policy environment individualises late-life financial decision-making. The individualisation of these financial risks is evident across policy domains. Older people are increasingly expected to be actuarial subjects and competent money managers through to late old age. Within this context, how money relations within ageing households are affected by financial capability, declining cognition and formal capacity for financial decision-making are matters hitherto underexplored in academic literature. This chapter brings together understandings from across disciplines to highlight the growing complexities of everyday lives for older people and financial welfare in later life, arguing that these are matters of profound personal importance requiring attention from researchers and policy actors.

Suggested Citation

  • Debora Price, 2024. "Ageing populations, financial capability and household financial decision-making in the context of neoliberal social policy systems," Chapters, in: Fran Bennett & Silvia Avram & Siobhan Austen (ed.), A Research Agenda for Financial Resources within the Household, chapter 12, pages 193-207, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:21117_12
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    File URL: https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781802204001.00022
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