Governing Financialization

£41.29

Governing Financialization

The Tangled Politics of Financial Liberalization in Britain

Comparative politics Political economy Economic systems and structures Economic and financial crises and disasters

Author: Jack Copley

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Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 3rd December 2021

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 911 Kb

ISBN: 9780192651150


Capitalism and Financialization

Capitalism has become financialized. Since the 1970s, the swelling of financial markets and asset price bubbles has occurred alongside weaker underlying economic growth. Yet financialization was not a spontaneous market development - it was deeply political. States fuelled this process through policies of financial liberalization, and the British state lies at the heart of the story.

Britain's Role in Financial Liberalization

Britain's radical financial liberalizations in the 1970s and 1980s were instrumental in creating a financialized global economic order in which the City of London emerged as a central hub. But why did the British state propel financialization? The conventional wisdom points to the lobbying power of financial elites and the strength of neoliberal ideology. However, Governing Financialization offers an alternative explanation through an in-depth exploration of declassified state archives.

Understanding the Policies

By examining key financial liberalizations in the 1970s and 1980s - including the notorious Big Bang - this book argues that these policies were not part of an intentional scheme to create a new finance-led economic model. Instead, they were designed to address immediate governing dilemmas related to the grinding stagflation crisis and its aftershocks.

The Dilemmas Faced by British Governments

In this era, British governments found themselves trapped between global competitive pressures to enforce painful domestic adjustment and national political pressures to maintain existing living standards. Financial liberalization was pursued in a trial-and-error manner to navigate this dilemma. By unleashing financial markets, the state hoped to either postpone the worst effects of the crisis, or enact tough economic restructuring in an arm's-length fashion. Financialization was an accidental outcome, not an intentional result.

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