Intergenerational financial assistance with home ownership: Considering the potential for financial elder abuse

Author:

Cook Julia1ORCID,Cook Peta S.2

Affiliation:

1. School of Humanities, Creative Industries and Social Science University of Newcastle Callaghan New South Wales Australia

2. School of Social Sciences, College of Arts, Law and Education University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia

Abstract

AbstractIntergenerational financial assistance with home ownership has attracted increasing scholarly interest in recent years. Existing research has focussed primarily on its impact on inequality, housing market outcomes and notions of meritocracy, as well as the relational dynamics through which it is negotiated. The topic of financial elder abuse has, however, remained an area of relative silence in this literature despite concerns raised by advocacy groups. In this article, we consider how intergenerational financial assistance may facilitate attitudes and behaviours that can result in financial elder abuse. To do so, we draw on an analysis of the Banking Code of Practice and the presumption of advancement, each of which shapes the way intergenerational financial assistance with home ownership unfolds in Australia. We then consider how such arrangements play out in practice through analysis of interviews conducted with donors and recipients of assistance of this type. We ultimately argue that in the context of intergenerational financial assistance with home ownership, the potential for financial elder abuse should be considered not just as an individual or family issue rooted in relationships, but as the outcome of ageist social attitudes and structural problems in the asset economy.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference53 articles.

1. Class in the 21st century: Asset inflation and the new logic of inequality

2. The false promise of homeownership: Homeowner societies in an era of declining access and rising inequality

3. Aussie. (2021)Guarantor loans jump 71 percent across Australia in six years. Aussie Home Loans Accessed 14 August 2023 via. Available from:https://www.aussie.com.au/insights/news/guarantor‐loans‐jump‐71‐per‐cent‐across‐australia‐in‐six‐years/

4. Australian Banking Association. (2021)Preventing and responding to financial abuse (including elder financial abuse). Accessed 7 August 2023 viahttps://www.ausbanking.org.au/wp‐content/uploads/2021/05/ABA‐Family‐Domestic‐Violence‐Industry‐Guideline.pdf

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