Neoliberalism as Lived Experience and Everyday Practice

The Making of Everyman's Capitalism

  • Funder: Riksbankens jubileumsfond

Project Description

This sub-theme of the larger Neoliberalism in the Nordics Research Programme (Riksbankens Jubileumsfond 2020–2026) examines how the market turn played out in mundane settings by focusing on everyday financial culture. In the neoliberal imaginary, financial markets rather than the state are regarded as crucial to securing the future welfare of individuals. Credit, saving, investment and debt, the theme suggests, have become crucial meeting points between welfare state arrangements and neoliberal practices and key sites for investigating projections of the consumer (debtor, saver, investor) as social agent and citizen. Our main topics are the popularization of stock saving and the domestication of consumer credit, but we are also interested in the broader dissemination of entrepreneurship ideals as well as in the endeavours by different market and non-market actors to raise the level of “financial literacy” in society.

The theme has a theoretical ambition to develop concepts and methods for the study of everyday engagements with the market. We aim to identify the seemingly banal micro-infrastructures that made new financial practices possible, such as credit cards or mutual funds. Furthermore, we look at the knowledge associated with personal finances from the double perspective of learning and unlearning. The latter is especially important to highlight, as we assert that people actually had to unlearn deeply rooted understandings of thrift, saving and sound economic practices in general. Finally, we are interested in the moral boundary work that took place when ordinary men and women entered the world of financial markets. We will highlight how unlikely agents of financial marketisation, for example the consumer cooperative movement or the saving banks, worked actively to make financial practices such as borrowing and investing socially and ideologically acceptable and how this resulted in changing views and practices.

Please see our blogpost for more information about the project.

Advertisement for the credit card Sparbankskortet in the journal Köpmannen (21 April 1980).

Advertisement for PKfonder in Dagens Nyheter (6 June 1986).

About the Project

The project is part of the research program "Neoliberalism in the Nordics: Developing an Absent Theme", financed by the Riksbankens Jubileumsfond.

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