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Global finance in crisis

dc.contributor.authorKonings, Martijn
dc.contributor.authorPanitch, Leo
dc.date.accessioned2023-06-20T12:52:00Z
dc.date.available2023-06-20T12:52:00Z
dc.date.issued2009
dc.descriptionThis chapter, a slightly revised version of an article that appeared in Historical Materialism (16 (4)) draws on our chapters in American Empire and the Political Economy of Global Finance (edited by Leo Panitch and Martijn Konings), Palgrave, 2nd edition 2009.en
dc.description.abstractThis essay examines the questions raised by the present financial crisis through an enquiry into the institutional foundations of American finance. We view with some skepticism strong claims concerning the disastrous outcome for the structural dynamism of the global financial system and America's position in it. Many critical political economists tend to take the system of global financial markets as their point of departure and then locate the US in this system. Such approaches, however, generally fail to do justice to the decades-long build up of US financial power and do not capture many of the organic institutional linkages through which the American state is connected to the world of global finance and which are responsible for its imperial sprawl. In many ways, financial globalization is not best understood as the re-emergence of international finance but rather as a process through which the expansionary dynamics of American finance took on global dimensions. Because the present system of global finance has been shaped so profoundly by specifically American institutions and practices, it will not do to evaluate the changes and transformations of this system on the basis of either an abstract, generic model of capitalism or mere extrapolations from conjunctural crises. Crisis and instability are part and parcel of the dynamics of imperial finance and so are the managerial capacities developed by the US state. The most important questions that should occupy critical political economists therefore have to do not with what appear to be external challenges to US financial power (or the putative opportunities for progressive change opened up by them), but rather relate to the ways in which the imperial network of intricate, complex and often opaque institutional linkages between the US state and global finance is managed and reproduced.en
dc.description.facultyInstituto Complutense de Estudios Internacionales (ICEI)
dc.description.refereedTRUE
dc.description.statuspub
dc.eprint.idhttps://eprints.ucm.es/id/eprint/68215
dc.identifier.issn1989-5917
dc.identifier.relatedurlhttps://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/PADE
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/52703
dc.journal.titlePapeles de Europa
dc.language.isoeng
dc.page.final57
dc.page.initial29
dc.publisherInstituto Complutense de Estudios Internacionales (ICEI)
dc.rightsAtribución 3.0 España
dc.rights.accessRightsopen access
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
dc.subject.jelB51
dc.subject.jelF30
dc.subject.jelF54
dc.subject.jelG01
dc.subject.jelG15
dc.subject.keywordUnited States
dc.subject.keywordImperialism
dc.subject.keywordFinance
dc.subject.keywordGlobalization
dc.subject.keywordSubprime crisis.
dc.subject.ucmEconomía internacional
dc.subject.ucmHistoria económica
dc.subject.ucmMercados bursátiles y financieros
dc.subject.unesco5310 Economía Internacional
dc.subject.unesco5506.06 Historia de la Economía
dc.titleGlobal finance in crisisen
dc.typejournal article
dc.volume.number19
dspace.entity.typePublication

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