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The Status Quo Crisis - Global Financial Governance After the 2008 Meltdown (Hardcover)
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The Status Quo Crisis - Global Financial Governance After the 2008 Meltdown (Hardcover)
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The 2008 financial crisis was the worst since the Great Depression
and many voices argued that it would transform global financial
governance. Analysts anticipated a "Bretton Woods moment,"
referring to the 1944 conference that established the postwar
international financial order. Widespread expectations of change
were then reinforced by the creation of the G20 leaders' forum,
extensive debates about the dollar's global role, the launching of
international financial regulatory reforms, and the establishment
of the Financial Stability Board.
But half a decade later, how much has really changed? In The Status
Quo Crisis, Helleiner surveys the landscape and argues that
continuity has marked global financial governance more than
dramatic transformation. The G20 leaders forum contributed much
less to the management of the crisis than advertised. The US dollar
remains unchallenged as the world's dominant international
currency. The market-friendly nature of pre-crisis international
financial regulation has been not overturned in a significant
manner. And the Financial Stability Board has strengthened the
governance of international financial standards in only very modest
ways.
What we are left with are some small-bore incremental changes that,
collectively, have not fundamentally restructured the governance of
the global financial system. Helleiner argues that this strangely
conservative result was generated partly by the structural power
and active policy choices of the country at the center of the
crisis: the United States. Status quo outcomes also reflected the
unexpected weakness of Europe and conservatism of policymakers in
large emerging market countries. Only if this distinct
configuration of power and politics among and within influential
states shifted in the coming years might the 2008 crisis leave a
more transformative legacy over the longer term.
Cutting against much of the received wisdom on offer today, The
Status Quo Crisis will be essential reading for those interested in
the politics of global finance and for anyone curious how
expectations of change can be thwarted after even in the most dire
of crises.
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