Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Santos, Ana C.
Data de Publicação: 2016
Outros Autores: Teles, Nuno
Tipo de documento: Outros
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP)
Texto Completo: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/40975
Resumo: This paper identifies general patterns of household financial behaviour for three groups of countries: The Early Financialisers, the Economic and Monetary Union Core and the Latecomers. Even though they stand in different positions as regards the development of their respective financial systems and household engagement with finance, there is a shared trend of growth of household debt and financial wealth, denoting common institutional changes across Europe and thus the systematic character of financialisation as an overall process of transformation of the economy and society. The evolution of pension and life insurance funds is highlighted, becoming the second most important financial asset held by households. This underlines the role of reforms of pension systems in promoting household financial relations, more than a shift towards investment in capital markets stimulated by new investment opportunities supplied by finance. Despite the exposure of private schemes to the financial turmoil, the current crisis has presented itself as an opportunity to bring the pension reform agenda even further forward. However, the trend towards the privatisation of social protection systems, enhancing individual responsibility through growing access to financial markets, must be assessed against the background of greater levels of unemployment and increasingly precarious employment relations that undermine it.
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spelling Recent Trends in Household Financial BehaviourFinancialisationHouseholdsDebtFinancial AssetsEUThis paper identifies general patterns of household financial behaviour for three groups of countries: The Early Financialisers, the Economic and Monetary Union Core and the Latecomers. Even though they stand in different positions as regards the development of their respective financial systems and household engagement with finance, there is a shared trend of growth of household debt and financial wealth, denoting common institutional changes across Europe and thus the systematic character of financialisation as an overall process of transformation of the economy and society. The evolution of pension and life insurance funds is highlighted, becoming the second most important financial asset held by households. This underlines the role of reforms of pension systems in promoting household financial relations, more than a shift towards investment in capital markets stimulated by new investment opportunities supplied by finance. Despite the exposure of private schemes to the financial turmoil, the current crisis has presented itself as an opportunity to bring the pension reform agenda even further forward. However, the trend towards the privatisation of social protection systems, enhancing individual responsibility through growing access to financial markets, must be assessed against the background of greater levels of unemployment and increasingly precarious employment relations that undermine it.FESSUD2016-11info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/otherhttps://hdl.handle.net/10316/40975https://hdl.handle.net/10316/40975eng2052-8035http://fessud.eu/working-papers/#WP5Santos, Ana C.Teles, Nunoinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP)instname:FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologiainstacron:RCAAP2020-05-25T11:25:47Zoai:estudogeral.uc.pt:10316/40975Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireinfo@rcaap.ptopendoar:https://opendoar.ac.uk/repository/71602025-05-29T05:09:02.195134Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP) - FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologiafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
title Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
spellingShingle Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
Santos, Ana C.
Financialisation
Households
Debt
Financial Assets
EU
title_short Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
title_full Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
title_fullStr Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
title_sort Recent Trends in Household Financial Behaviour
author Santos, Ana C.
author_facet Santos, Ana C.
Teles, Nuno
author_role author
author2 Teles, Nuno
author2_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Santos, Ana C.
Teles, Nuno
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Financialisation
Households
Debt
Financial Assets
EU
topic Financialisation
Households
Debt
Financial Assets
EU
description This paper identifies general patterns of household financial behaviour for three groups of countries: The Early Financialisers, the Economic and Monetary Union Core and the Latecomers. Even though they stand in different positions as regards the development of their respective financial systems and household engagement with finance, there is a shared trend of growth of household debt and financial wealth, denoting common institutional changes across Europe and thus the systematic character of financialisation as an overall process of transformation of the economy and society. The evolution of pension and life insurance funds is highlighted, becoming the second most important financial asset held by households. This underlines the role of reforms of pension systems in promoting household financial relations, more than a shift towards investment in capital markets stimulated by new investment opportunities supplied by finance. Despite the exposure of private schemes to the financial turmoil, the current crisis has presented itself as an opportunity to bring the pension reform agenda even further forward. However, the trend towards the privatisation of social protection systems, enhancing individual responsibility through growing access to financial markets, must be assessed against the background of greater levels of unemployment and increasingly precarious employment relations that undermine it.
publishDate 2016
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2016-11
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http://fessud.eu/working-papers/#WP5
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