Financial gaslighting: The financialisation of care in later life

IF 8.3 2区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS, FINANCE Critical Perspectives on Accounting Pub Date : 2025-01-27 DOI:10.1016/j.cpa.2025.102788
Erin Twyford , Rachel Rowe , Jane Andrew
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Abstract

The world’s population is ageing, and the provision and sustainability of aged care services are urgent. Like structural reforms in similar settings, aged care has been subjected to the logics of financialisation, yet few studies examine its mobilisation in aged care. Drawing on nearly 900 submissions to the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety in Australia, we provide insights into how financialisation presents in an aged care setting and its implications for older people. The study draws on three features of financialisation to explore its effects on everyday life within this context: the ‘assetisation’ of the home; the rhetoric of choice used to shift risks from the state to people; and the discourse of financial literacy, which has cultivated individual responsibility for the management of aged care. We argue that older people are ‘financially gaslit’ into believing that the provision of aged care is designed to support autonomy, choice, and information symmetries when, in reality, financialisation in aged care involves significant wealth transfer from individuals to private providers. Given the unevenness of home ownership at retirement, the variability in the capacity to exercise informed choice in later life, and the spectrum of financial literacy, we find that the current model displaces responsibility for funding aged care onto those in need of care. In turn, responsibilising people to make complex financial choices about the care needed in later stages of life ensures that substantive financial risks are shifted to those amongst the community’s most vulnerable.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
7.80%
发文量
91
期刊介绍: Critical Perspectives on Accounting aims to provide a forum for the growing number of accounting researchers and practitioners who realize that conventional theory and practice is ill-suited to the challenges of the modern environment, and that accounting practices and corporate behavior are inextricably connected with many allocative, distributive, social, and ecological problems of our era. From such concerns, a new literature is emerging that seeks to reformulate corporate, social, and political activity, and the theoretical and practical means by which we apprehend and affect that activity. Research Areas Include: • Studies involving the political economy of accounting, critical accounting, radical accounting, and accounting''s implication in the exercise of power • Financial accounting''s role in the processes of international capital formation, including its impact on stock market stability and international banking activities • Management accounting''s role in organizing the labor process • The relationship between accounting and the state in various social formations • Studies of accounting''s historical role, as a means of "remembering" the subject''s social and conflictual character • The role of accounting in establishing "real" democracy at work and other domains of life • Accounting''s adjudicative function in international exchanges, such as that of the Third World debt • Antagonisms between the social and private character of accounting, such as conflicts of interest in the audit process • The identification of new constituencies for radical and critical accounting information • Accounting''s involvement in gender and class conflicts in the workplace • The interplay between accounting, social conflict, industrialization, bureaucracy, and technocracy • Reappraisals of the role of accounting as a science and technology • Critical reviews of "useful" scientific knowledge about organizations
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