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Debt and Austerity: Implications of the Financial Crisis [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 360 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Nov-2020
  • Leidėjas: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1839104341
  • ISBN-13: 9781839104343
  • Formatas: Hardback, 360 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Nov-2020
  • Leidėjas: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1839104341
  • ISBN-13: 9781839104343
This book explores the complex interactions between debt and austerity, analysing the social, economic, and legal implications of governments’ responses to the 2008 financial crisis. Demonstrating how the nature of debt for those on low incomes has changed radically over the last decade, the chapters provide insight into how structural inequality was exacerbated by changes in the redistributive state, the legal system, and the welfare system. The examination occurs on a number of levels and these issues are explored through the lens of power, place, and class. The authors utilize both international case studies and 'on the ground' experiences, reviewing the role of high cost credit, bailiffs, local governments, bankruptcy, and debt advice. Through the analysis of the nature and structure of debt in specific countries, it highlights important lessons for a global audience. This unique book offers a broad, multi-faceted insight into the issue of low-income debt which will greatly benefit academics in law, social policy, geography, and economics. Its focus on practical steps and potential reforms, as well as contributions from third sector organizations, will also interest practitioners, policymakers, and NGOs.

This book explores the complex interactions between debt and austerity, analysing the social, economic, and legal implications of governments’ responses to the 2008 financial crisis.

Recenzijos

The book is brilliant for illuminating the crush and bind of debt for low-income individuals in otherwise high-income British society since the advent of post-2008 austerity. Far from a unique and cloistered experience of the unlucky or undeserving, the book makes clear how gripping debt will remain without a range of urgently needed policy changes. These chapters will be indispensable reading for students, scholars, civil society, and, one desperately hopes, policy makers. -- Heather Whiteside, Economic Geography As problems of debt and overindebtedness loom large in the wake of the Coronavirus pandemic, this rich and interdisciplinary collection of essays provides timely insights into the theoretical, policy and practical issues in addressing problems of debt and low income in contemporary society. -- Iain Ramsay, University of Kent, UK 'As problems of debt and overindebtedness loom large in the wake of the Coronavirus pandemic, this rich and interdisciplinary collection of essays provides timely insights into the theoretical, policy and practical issues in addressing problems of debt and low income in contemporary society.'

List of figures
vii
List of tables
viii
List of contributors
ix
Foreword xv
Acknowledgements xviii
PART I NATURE OF THE PROBLEM
1 Understanding low-income debt in a high-income country
2(28)
Mia Gray
Katharina Moser
Jodi Gardner
2 Mortgage debt in an age of austerity
30(16)
Susan J. Smith
3 Debt begets debt: public and private debt in austerity Britain
46(23)
Mia Gray
4 Austerity and financial safety nets: bankruptcy abuse prevention and bank prevention in Irish post-crisis policy?
69(25)
Joseph Spooner
5 The changing infrastructure of debt relief: privatisation, bureaucracy and public choice
94(31)
Katharina Moser
6 `I just felt responsible for my debts': debt stigma and class(ificatory) exploitation
125(26)
Matthew Sparkes
7 Austere social reproduction and the gendered geographies of debt
151(24)
Sam Strong
PART II NATURE OF THE SOLUTION
8 The poverty premium and debt
175(19)
Sara Davies
Andrea Finney
9 High-cost credit in the UK: what's the problem and how should policy respond?
194(25)
Karen Rowlingson
10 The rise and rise of affordability complaints
219(21)
Sara Williams
11 Consumer debt problems and the image of the consumer in Swedish consumer credit regulation
240(20)
Ann-Sofie Henrikson
12 Partnering to address financial exclusion in Australia
260(19)
Jordan Grace
13 Relief from austerity: the case for a targeted write-off of the UK's household debt stock
279(19)
Johnna Montgomerie
14 Austerity, inequality and high-cost credit: understanding the role of a social minimum
298(23)
Jodi Gardner
Index 321
Edited by Jodi Gardner, University of Auckland, New Zealand, Mia Gray, Senior University Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of Cambridge and Fellow at Girton College and Katharina Moser, Lecturer, Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham, UK