Questioning Financial Governance from a Feminist Perspective
brings together feminist economists and feminist political
economists from different countries located in North America and
Europe to analyze the strategic silence about gender in fiscal and
monetary policy, and financial regulation. This silence reflects a
set of assumptions that the key instruments of financial governance
are gender-neutral. This often masks the ways in which financial
governance operates to the disadvantage of women and reinforces
gender inequality.
This book examines both the transformations in the governance of
finance that predate the financial crisis, as well as some
dimension of the crisis itself. The transformations increasingly
involved private as well as public forms of power, along with
institutions of state and civil society, operating at the local,
national, regional and global levels. An important aspect of these
transformations has been the creation of policy rules (often
enacted in laws) that limit the discretion of national policy
makers with respect to fiscal, monetary, and financial sector
policies. These policy rules tend to have inscribed in them a
series of biases that have gender (as well as class and race-based)
outcomes. The biases identified by the authors in the various
chapters are the deflationary bias, male breadwinner bias, and
commodification bias, adding two new biases: risk bias and creditor
bias.
The originality of the book is that its primary focus is on
macroeconomic policies (fiscal and monetary) and financial
governance from a feminist perspective with a focus on the gross
domestic product and its fluctuations and growth, paid employment
and inflation, the budget surplus/deficit, levels of government
expenditure and tax revenue, and supply of money. The central
findings are that the key instruments of financial governance are
not gender neutral. Each chapter considers examples of financial
governance, and how it relates to the gender order, including
divisions of labour, and relations of power and privilege.
This book is key reading for anyone studying feminist economics,
and should also be of interest to those researching macroeconomics,
political economics and women s studies.
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