Summary information

Study title

The financialisation of social welfare. The role of credit and financial counselling for social inclusion and exclusion.

Creator

Poppe, Christian (SIFO)

Study number / PID

https://doi.org/10.18712/NSD-NSD2256-V1 (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

This project is based on the idea that the liberalisation of people's access to credit fundamentally changed the way social welfare and risks are produced and distributed. The overall research question is how well individual households are protected against financial risks within the frameworks of the contemporary Norwegian welfare state. The analysis is carried out in three steps. Firstly, the institutionalisation of financial counselling is addressed. The main focus is on social inclusion and exclusion mechanisms, including the emergence of market-based welfare regimes, the formal regulation of financial counselling within such frameworks and individual-level self-governance for taking on risks. Secondly, the financial counselling service itself is studied in detail. Here, the main focus is on financial advice before loans are taken out and money advice after payment problems have occurred, and the interrelationship between the two types of counselling. Thirdly, the project looks at implications and pot entials for improving existing practices. This is a comparative study of financial counselling in Norway, Denmark and UK. The main focus of the study is the case of Norway. The comparative design implies to compare existing types of services within this case. It further implies to compare the Norwegian service provision with those of Denmark and the UK in order to learn from the differences and generate new knowledge about the workings of the Norwegian context. This raises the need for a multimethodological approach using qualitative and quantitative techniques based on a variety of data sources, partly found in existing registries, including historical data; political debates; existing research; registry data provided by debt collectors and The Norwegi an State Housing Bank; interviews with key informants in the political and administrative system; surveys among advisors in banks, local NAV directors and users of financial counselling in the municipalities.

Keywords

Methodology

Data collection period

01/09/2014 - 01/10/2014

Country

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric

Data collection mode

Not available

Funding information

Funder

The Research Council of Norway

Grant number

202522

Access

Publisher

Sikt - Norwegian Agency for Shared Services in Education and Research

Publication year

2024-01-09T00:00:00

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

Not available