Books > Business & Economics > Economics > Financial crises & disasters
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Wall Street at War - The Secret Struggle for the Global Economy (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
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Wall Street at War - The Secret Struggle for the Global Economy (Paperback, New)
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Loot Price R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
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Many of the problems that lie at the heart of the current financial
crisis stem from a significant but little-known development that
occurred in the early 1980s: investors changed their investment
criteria. This change gave rise to a conflict - a silent war -
between executives in charge of the world's largest corporations,
on the one hand, and credit agencies whose task it is to enforce
the criteria on investors' behalf, on the other. The credit
agencies that flourished in New York, London and elsewhere acquired
a great deal of power because their ratings now reflected investors
new priorities, and so controlled the ability of corporations to
gain access to capital. The rise of the credit agencies thereby
also represented a new model of capitalism, quite different from
the old model of the risk-taking entrepreneur. To attract
investment capital, corporations now have to employ enormous
resources to create the illusion that capital is directed in line
with the new expectations imposed by the credit agencies. The
result is that devious reporting on companies' activities has
become endemic. Drawing on more than six years of fieldwork carried
out in some of the world's most powerful corporations and credit
rating agencies on Wall Street, this short book describes, for the
first time, the unspoken conflict that shapes the global economy.
Anthropologist Alexandra Ouroussoff describes with startling
clarity the effects of Wall Street's silent war: from the financial
community's inability to price risk accurately (now recognised as a
major cause of the financial crisis) to the deep reasons behind
credit analysts' misplaced faith in numbers. Yet the book's most
important contribution is its path-breaking analysis of the
conditions of the conflict itself, here revealed as an unintended
consequence of a much deeper transformation in the conditions
underlying capitalism's success.
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