重新思考关于家庭改善的决策

Q4 Social Sciences IPPR Progressive Review Pub Date : 2023-04-03 DOI:10.1111/newe.12337
Ruth Bookbinder
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This article summarises our findings and highlights the implications for retrofit policy.</p><p>Our approach frames research into energy demand and its use through the lens of relational sociology. Hargreaves and Middlemiss identified three categories of social relations that informed energy consumption in homes: relations with friends and family; relations with agencies and institutions; and relations associated with identity.5 Our interviews with homeowners, which we summarise below, confirmed that these categories played an important role in informing people's decisions to undertake work on their homes.</p><p>However, social relations associated with money were also critical and carry implications for how homeowners will engage with incentives or grants to retrofit their homes. 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This finding suggests that while homeowners may want to improve the energy efficiency of their homes, social relations with family or friends will likely influence <i>when</i> they are willing to engage with retrofit policy. Moreover, the importance of relations with friends and family to determining when homeowners embark on renovations further underlines the point that homeowners are not simply waiting for the right financial incentive to retrofit their homes.</p><p>Other researchers have noted the lack of trust between homeowners and agencies such as tradespeople has reduced the uptake of retrofit measures. The homeowners we interviewed also had limited trust in tradespeople and as a result undertook a significant amount of ‘relational work’ to build trust with these agencies. For decisions around renovation, relational work to build trust with tradespeople included seeking recommendations from friends, relatives, neighbours, or community groups on sites such as Facebook. Brand recognition helped establish trust but it was also important for interviewees to feel like the tradespeople would be easily reachable if there was an issue; consequently, they preferred to local tradespeople with accessible storefronts. Moreover, while people would check tradespeople's ratings on sites such as trustatrader.com, they were often sceptical of these sites and would not rely on them alone.</p><p>One of the most striking findings to emerge from our interviews was people's aversion to taking out debt to undertake work on their homes. An interviewee described debt as “the heaviest thing you could hang on your neck”, while several other interviewees noted that the ‘right way’ to pay for renovations was through savings or unexpected income, such as an inheritance. Interviewees’ aversion to debt suggests that they would be reluctant to enter into long term financing arrangements to pay for retrofit. Moreover, several interviewees expressed a degree of suspicion about government schemes for measures to improve the energy efficiency of homes, saying that they were too complicated or insufficient to seek out. This lack of trust in the structure of the arrangement also speaks to the importance of trust in the agencies and institutions, which is currently lacking in retrofit policy and incentives.</p><p>To accelerate retrofit it is essential to reframe conceptualisations of homeowners as rational actors and account for the relational dynamics that shape decision making within and about homes. Financial packages are important but insufficient incentives to encourage take up of retrofit schemes. It is also necessary to consider how people make decisions about their homes and account for these processes when designing retrofit policy. A social relations approach sheds light on many of these dynamics. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

识别这些问题是很重要的;然而,仅仅消除这些障碍不足以提高这些政策的成功程度。在所有这些问题上,英国能源政策都存在一种潜在的、有缺陷的倾向,即把房主塑造成理性的行为者,他们参与政策是基于正确的金融报价研究人员已经注意到这种框架的局限性,但仍然有必要开发一种替代方法来理解人们如何对自己的家做出决定。在最近的一篇论文中,我们提出了一种社会关系方法来挑战房主的理性行为者概念的框架和影响决策的因素。本文总结了我们的研究结果,并强调了对改造政策的影响。我们的方法框架研究能源需求及其使用通过关系社会学的镜头。哈格里夫斯和米德尔米斯确定了影响家庭能源消耗的三类社会关系:与朋友和家人的关系;与机关和机构的关系;以及与同一性相关的关系我们对房主的采访,我们总结如下,证实了这些类别在告知人们决定进行房屋工作方面发挥了重要作用。然而,与金钱相关的社会关系也很关键,并影响到房主如何利用奖励或补助来改造他们的房屋。例如,Zelizer认为社会关系决定了人们愿意为什么买单,谁会买单,以及人们愿意为什么买单人们还会根据钱的来源和在家庭中如何商定钱的意义,以不同的方式“指定”钱。例如,受访者普遍对使用贷款来支付装修费用表现出强烈的厌恶,他们更愿意使用储蓄或意外之财,如遗产。通过将与金钱相关的社会关系添加到哈格里夫斯和米德尔米斯确定的三个类别中,我们能够更好地理解影响人们如何真正做出房屋决策的动力——关系因素和理性激励的结合。我们还开始解释他们对某些财政激励的有限兴趣,以及如何调整能源政策以加速国内改造。与朋友和家庭有关的社会关系在决定人们何时完成房屋工作以及他们承担的工作类型方面发挥了重要作用。例如,一位受访者指出,他们需要等待装修,因为他们有年幼的孩子,他们想避免干扰。与此同时,其他受访者指出,他们想创造一个更适合家人和朋友社交的空间。至关重要的是,即使人们注意到对配件老化或改善绝缘的实际担忧,他们仍然强调这些作品如何更好地服务于他们与家人或朋友的社交关系。这一发现表明,虽然房主可能希望提高房屋的能源效率,但当他们愿意参与改造政策时,与家人或朋友的社会关系可能会影响他们。此外,与朋友和家人的关系在决定房主何时开始装修方面的重要性进一步强调了这一点,即房主不仅仅是在等待合适的经济激励来改造他们的房屋。其他研究人员指出,房主和商人等中介机构之间缺乏信任,减少了改造措施的采用。我们采访的房主对商人的信任也有限,因此他们承担了大量的“关系工作”来与这些代理商建立信任。在装修决策方面,与商人建立信任的关系工作包括从朋友、亲戚、邻居或Facebook等网站上的社区团体那里寻求建议。品牌认知度有助于建立信任,但对受访者来说,让他们觉得在出现问题时很容易联系到商人也很重要;因此,他们更喜欢当地的商人,有方便的店面。此外,尽管人们会在trustatrader.com等网站上查看商人的评分,但他们往往对这些网站持怀疑态度,不会只依赖它们。从我们的采访中得出的最引人注目的发现之一是,人们不愿意借贷款来买房。一位受访者将债务描述为“你脖子上最重的东西”,而其他几位受访者指出,支付装修费用的“正确方式”是通过储蓄或意外收入,比如遗产。受访者对债务的厌恶表明,他们不愿意签订长期融资安排来支付改造费用。 此外,几位受访者对政府提高家庭能源效率的措施计划表示一定程度的怀疑,称这些计划过于复杂或不够充分,难以探究。这种对安排结构的不信任也说明了对机构和机构的信任的重要性,目前在改造政策和奖励方面缺乏信任。为了加速改造,必须重新定义房主作为理性行为者的概念,并解释影响房屋内部和有关房屋决策的关系动态。财政方案很重要,但不足以鼓励采用改造计划。在设计改造政策时,也有必要考虑人们如何对他们的房屋做出决定,并考虑这些过程。社会关系的方法揭示了许多这些动态。在家庭装修的背景下,与朋友和家人的社会关系;机关和机构;的身份;金钱不仅会影响人们对房屋进行装修的时间,还会影响他们在装修期间的体验(“顾客之旅”)。人们装修自己的房子是为了更好地服务于与家人和朋友的社会关系,似乎对贷款来支付装修费用有强烈的反感。同样重要的是,人们要相信他们所需要的工作的信息来源,并且商人有能力完成这些工作。对于改造计划来说,人们信任支付工程费用的融资方案的来源和组织这些项目的媒介也是至关重要的。因此,能源政策需要承认各种各样的情况,这些情况将导致人们参与改造措施,并采取必要的步骤,以保持房主对这一过程的信任。
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Rethinking decision-making about home improvements

It is important to identify these problems; however, simply removing these barriers is insufficient to improve the success of these policies. Across each of these issues, there is underlying and flawed tendency within UK energy policy to frame homeowners as rational actors, whose engagement with policy is based on the right financial offer.3 Researchers have noted the limitations of this framing but it is still necessary to develop an alternative approach to understand how people make decisions about their homes. In a recent paper,4 we propose a social relations approach to challenge the framing of the rational-actor conceptualisation of homeowners and the factors that shape decision making. This article summarises our findings and highlights the implications for retrofit policy.

Our approach frames research into energy demand and its use through the lens of relational sociology. Hargreaves and Middlemiss identified three categories of social relations that informed energy consumption in homes: relations with friends and family; relations with agencies and institutions; and relations associated with identity.5 Our interviews with homeowners, which we summarise below, confirmed that these categories played an important role in informing people's decisions to undertake work on their homes.

However, social relations associated with money were also critical and carry implications for how homeowners will engage with incentives or grants to retrofit their homes. For example, Zelizer has argued that social relations determine what people are happy to pay for, who will pay, and how much people are willing to pay.6 People also ‘earmark’ money differently depending on its origin and how its meaning is negotiated within the household. For instance, interviewees generally showed a strong aversion to using loans to pay for renovations, preferring to use savings or unexpected windfalls, such as inheritances. By adding social relations associated with money to the three categories that Hargreaves and Middlemiss identified, we are better able to understand the dynamics that shape how people really make decisions about their homes – a combination of relational factors, and rational incentives. We also begin to explain their limited interests in some financial incentives and therefore how energy policy might be adapted to accelerate domestic retrofit.

Social relations associated with friends and family played an important role in determining when people got work done on their homes, and the types of work that they undertook. For instance, one interviewee noted that they needed to wait to do the renovations as they had young children and they wanted to avoid the disruption. Meanwhile, other interviewees noted that they wanted to create a space that better suited their family and socialising with friends. Critically, even when people noted practical concerns around aging fittings or improving insulation, they still underlined how the works would better serve their social relations with family or friends. This finding suggests that while homeowners may want to improve the energy efficiency of their homes, social relations with family or friends will likely influence when they are willing to engage with retrofit policy. Moreover, the importance of relations with friends and family to determining when homeowners embark on renovations further underlines the point that homeowners are not simply waiting for the right financial incentive to retrofit their homes.

Other researchers have noted the lack of trust between homeowners and agencies such as tradespeople has reduced the uptake of retrofit measures. The homeowners we interviewed also had limited trust in tradespeople and as a result undertook a significant amount of ‘relational work’ to build trust with these agencies. For decisions around renovation, relational work to build trust with tradespeople included seeking recommendations from friends, relatives, neighbours, or community groups on sites such as Facebook. Brand recognition helped establish trust but it was also important for interviewees to feel like the tradespeople would be easily reachable if there was an issue; consequently, they preferred to local tradespeople with accessible storefronts. Moreover, while people would check tradespeople's ratings on sites such as trustatrader.com, they were often sceptical of these sites and would not rely on them alone.

One of the most striking findings to emerge from our interviews was people's aversion to taking out debt to undertake work on their homes. An interviewee described debt as “the heaviest thing you could hang on your neck”, while several other interviewees noted that the ‘right way’ to pay for renovations was through savings or unexpected income, such as an inheritance. Interviewees’ aversion to debt suggests that they would be reluctant to enter into long term financing arrangements to pay for retrofit. Moreover, several interviewees expressed a degree of suspicion about government schemes for measures to improve the energy efficiency of homes, saying that they were too complicated or insufficient to seek out. This lack of trust in the structure of the arrangement also speaks to the importance of trust in the agencies and institutions, which is currently lacking in retrofit policy and incentives.

To accelerate retrofit it is essential to reframe conceptualisations of homeowners as rational actors and account for the relational dynamics that shape decision making within and about homes. Financial packages are important but insufficient incentives to encourage take up of retrofit schemes. It is also necessary to consider how people make decisions about their homes and account for these processes when designing retrofit policy. A social relations approach sheds light on many of these dynamics. In the context of home renovations social relations associated with friends and family; agencies and institutions; identity; and money influence when people will undertake works on their home but also shape their experiences (the ‘customer journey’) during renovations. People undertake works on their home to better serve social relations with family and friends and appear to have a strong aversion to taking out loans to pay for renovations. It is also critical that people trust the sources of information about the works that they need and that tradespeople are equipped to carry out these works. For retrofit schemes it is also vital that people trust the source of financing packages to pay for works and the medium through which these are organised. Energy policy consequently needs to acknowledge the variety of circumstances which will lead people to engage with retrofit measures and the steps that are necessary to maintain homeowners trust in the process.

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IPPR Progressive Review
IPPR Progressive Review Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
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期刊介绍: The permafrost of no alternatives has cracked; the horizon of political possibilities is expanding. IPPR Progressive Review is a pluralistic space to debate where next for progressives, examine the opportunities and challenges confronting us and ask the big questions facing our politics: transforming a failed economic model, renewing a frayed social contract, building a new relationship with Europe. Publishing the best writing in economics, politics and culture, IPPR Progressive Review explores how we can best build a more equal, humane and prosperous society.
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