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Democracy and Diversity in Financial Market Regulation (Paperback)
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Democracy and Diversity in Financial Market Regulation (Paperback)
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Financial markets have become acknowledged as a source of crisis,
and discussion of them has shifted from economics, through legal
and regulatory studies, to politics. Events from 2008 onwards raise
important, cross-disciplinary questions: must financial markets
drive states into political and existential crisis, must public
finances take over private losses, must citizens endure austerity?
This book argues that there is an alternative. If the financial
system were less 'connected', contagion within the market would be
reduced and crises would become more localised and intermittent,
less global and pervasive. The question then becomes how to reduce
connectedness within financial markets. This book argues that the
democratic direction of financial market policies can deliver this.
Politicising financial market policies - taking discussion of these
issues out of the sphere of the 'technical' and putting it into the
same democratically contested space as, for example, health and
welfare policies - would encourage differing policies to emerge in
different countries. Diversity of regulatory regimes would result
in some business models being attracted to some jurisdictions,
others to others. The resulting heterogeneity, when viewed from a
global perspective, would be a reversal of recent and current
tendencies towards one single/global 'level playing field', within
which all financial firms and sectors have become closely connected
and across which contagion inevitably reigns. No doubt the
democratisation of financial market policy would be opposed by big
firms - their interests being served by regulatory convergence -
and considered macabre by some financial regulators and central
bankers, who are coalescing into an elite community. However,
everyone else, Nicholas Dorn argues here, would be better off in a
financial world characterised by greater diversity.
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