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Articles

Debted Objects: Homemaking in an Era of Mortgage-Enabled Consumption

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Pages 293-311 | Published online: 14 Feb 2013
 

ABSTRACT

This paper assesses the relevance of mortgage-led consumption for the assemblage of home. Drawing on qualitative research completed in the UK, we show how the materials and meanings of owner-occupation are constituted by, and experienced through, the accumulation and deployment of secured debt. This is enabled by a particular financial regime, in which the proceeds of equity borrowing are freed for discretionary expenditure. Homes and their contents thus acquire the status of “debted objects”, and these form an interface between the financial and familial values comprising residential space. By attending to these mortgage-enabled purchases, we expose and evaluate the myriad ways in which equity borrowings animate the assemblage of home, adding value to property, linking domestic space with distant geographies and inspiring the art of dwelling.

Notes

1. We resist the conventional label, “mortgage equity withdrawal” (MEW) because of its specific and rather narrow meaning for economists, as spend that is neither saved nor reinvested into the housing stock. The term “equity borrowing” captures the fact that all sums borrowed against property are now available for discretionary spending; whether such monies are spent, saved or reinvested is an empirical question rather than a formulaic assumption.

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