Seminar (TURBA Lab - GADE): Towards new trade-offs between housing and pensions?

IN3’s Urban Transformation and Global Change Laboratory (TURBA Lab) and the eGovernança: Administració i Democràcia Electrònica (GADE) research group are pleased to invite you to the Seminar: «Towards new trade-offs between housing and pensions? Funded pensions and rental housing decommodification», given by Lorenzo Vidal, Ramón y Cajal Fellow at TURBA and the Faculty of Law and Political Science of the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya.

The seminar will be held, in hybrid format, on Thursday, April 10 at 10:30 am (CEST) in Room C1.16 of the Interdisciplinary R&I Hub (Building C).

Venue

Interdisciplinary R&I Hub (Building C - C1.16)
Rambla del Poblenou, 154
08018 Barcelona
Espanya

When

10/04/2025 10.30h

Organized by

Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, IN3's Urban Transformation and Global Change Laboratory (TURBA Lab) and the eGovernança: Administració i Democràcia Electrònica (GADE) research group

Marker
Leaflet © OpenStreetMap contributors, Powered by Esri | ICGC Catalunya, INE, Instituto Geográfico Nacional, Esri, HERE, Garmin, INCREMENT P, Intermap, USGS, METI/NASA

Program

Abstract

The fate of pensioners and tenants have started to become intertwined in the contemporary housing crisis. In the past two decades, pension funds have increasingly participated in rental housing equity investments, driven by the pursuit of higher yields and portfolio risk diversification. These investments are largely mediated by asset managers that operate across the globe. Building on the literature that has theorised the relationship between housing and pensions systems, we posit that a trade-off is emerging between funded pensions and rental housing decommodification. Whereas enhancing the returns on pension fund investments puts pressure on housing affordability and tenure security for tenants, rental housing decommodification, be it through collective ownership or rent controls, restricts the space for pension monies to grow. To illustrate the transnational dimension of this trade-off, we centre our analysis on Spain, a country with an established pay-as-you-go pension regime that has nevertheless received substantial foreign pension fund investments in residential real estate. Drawing from data on institutional investors and grey literature, we bring the pension fund geographies and political economies shaping the Spanish rental housing regime into relief, as well as suggest their broader generalizability beyond the case. Our transnational methodological approach contributes to better understanding the political economy of welfare regimes in an era marked by financialisation.

Key words: pension funds, rental housing, asset managers, welfare, financialisation, Spain

Lorenzo Vidal

Ramon y Cajal Fellow at TURBA and the Faculty of Law and Political Science of the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya.