Futures for the uncommitted? Translating net-zero to pension savers
This study explores the ambivalent futures inherent in pension savings. Pension funds aim to create safe economic futures for an ageing population, at the same time as the funds still contain assets in oil and other fossil fuels. The focus in this paper is on how commitments to net-zero emission tar...
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| Published in | Futures : the journal of policy, planning and futures studies Vol. 156; p. 103306 |
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| Main Author | |
| Format | Journal Article |
| Language | English |
| Published |
Elsevier Ltd
01.02.2024
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| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Get full text |
| ISSN | 0016-3287 1873-6378 1873-6378 |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.futures.2023.103306 |
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| Summary: | This study explores the ambivalent futures inherent in pension savings. Pension funds aim to create safe economic futures for an ageing population, at the same time as the funds still contain assets in oil and other fossil fuels. The focus in this paper is on how commitments to net-zero emission targets are translated by pension and insurance companies to the public and individual pension savers. The theoretical approach relies on the insights in studies of anticipation that anticipatory practices need to be materialized, for example, in practices, attachments and identities. These insights are brought into the framework of technologies of engagement. The context for the study is the pension system in Sweden, and an analysis is made of what modality of the future is enacted in the tools and practices that are made available for pension savers. A conclusion is that through comforting messages that pension savers neither need to worry about their economic safety, nor that their investments are not contributing to sustainable futures. Together with limited amount of information and insufficient tools for making well-informed investment choices, it is a rather passive pension saver that is assumed and enacted; a pension saver that is committed by default by being embedded in a financial system, but who presumably remains uncommitted to net-zero goals.
•Technologies of engagement are part of the anticipatory practices that make future real.•The pension saver in Sweden has been shaped as a financial subject.•Commitments to net-zero emissions are both selective and in need of materialization.•Financialization impede on how climate concerns are made objects of common concern. |
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| ISSN: | 0016-3287 1873-6378 1873-6378 |
| DOI: | 10.1016/j.futures.2023.103306 |