Since the global financial crisis the unprecedented role
independent central banks have come to play in our societies has
been increasingly disputed. This, in turn, has drawn greater
attention to the link between their legitimacy, public support and
their independence. Over the past thirty years, academics and
central bankers have tried to systematically pin down the sources
of central bank independence. One of them, however - culture - has
continuously eluded their grip. By engaging in an ethnography of
the social text of German, European and US monetary affairs, this
book introduces a new analytical framework that will enable
practitioners and academics, particularly within sociology,
economics, political economy, and political science, to gain a
clear understanding of the role of culture in central banking.
Also, it will show why for an independent central bank meeting its
own monetary goals may not be enough to secure public support for
itself and its currency.
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