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Markets and Development presents a series of critical contributions
focused on the political relationship between citizens, civil
society, and neoliberal development policy's latest form. The
dramatic increase of 'access to finance' investments, newly
gender-sensitive approaches to building neoliberal labour markets,
the universal promotion of public-private partnerships, and the
'development financing' of extractive industries, have all seen
citizens, social movements, and NGOs variously engaged in, and
against, neoliberalism like never before. The precise form that
this engagement takes is conditioned by both the perceived and real
opportunities, and the risks, of an agenda which seeks to intern
'emerging' and 'frontier markets' deep within a concretising world
market, with transformative repercussions for both those involved
and, notably, for state-society relations. The contributors to this
volume focus on essential aspects of the contemporary neoliberal
development agenda and its relationship to and with citizens and
civil society, tackling questions related to the roles that various
actors within civil society in the underdeveloped world are playing
under late capitalism, and how these roles relate to current
efforts to establish and extend markets, and market society more
broadly, in a neoliberal image. This book was originally published
as a special issue of Globalizations.
Multilateral development agencies have increasingly focused on
underdeveloped Asian countries as potential new sites for financial
capital. Often referred to as 'emerging markets', these economies
are seen as ripe for private sector investment and, at the same
time, in need of foreign capital to support rapid
industrialisation, modernisation and poverty reduction. This
confluence of interests suggests a means for quickly closing the
'development gap', primarily through mobilising regulatory,
institutional and governance reforms designed to reduce barriers to
foreign capital, institutional inefficiencies and risks to
investment, capital repatriation and market operation. Therefore,
development agencies now encourage the construction of 'enabling
environments' to support 'market driven development' through
processes variously identified as 'financialisation', centring on
the role of the market and private capital. While the state itself
has historically occupied a central place in economic development,
new financialised modes of development are increasingly
marginalising the state, its influence in the economy and thus its
ability to manage developmental outcomes. In this volume a
collection of leading authors critically assess these developments,
highlighting the emergence of financialised modes of development
and their contested and often problematic nature. Drawing upon a
series of case studies, the contributors explore not just the
increasing use of financialised development initiatives, but assess
critically their implications in terms of the emergent risks, costs
and inequalities that often accompany them. This book was
originally published as a special issue of the Asian Studies
Review.
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