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Notwithstanding financial crises, global foreign exchange markets
have undergone a tremendous growth during the last two decades.
Foreign exchange (FX) is often thought of as a site where economic
actors exchange currencies for buying foreign goods or selling
goods in foreign countries, but the FX markets are better
understood as financial spheres, dominated by speculative actors. A
key question is how this huge global speculative sphere has
developed, and what maintains it. Thus far, global currency markets
have been largely neglected by the new approaches to finance, and
until now no study has existed to chart the interplay of their
structural evolution and their shape as knowledge spheres. This new
book offers a systematic study of FX markets from a knowledge
sociological perspective, empirically focussing on analysts within
these markets. It makes the argument that market structures are
reflected in, and become stabilised by, distinct cultures of
financial expertise. These cultures connect the actions and
perceptions of loosely coupled, globally distributed market
players, and establish shared sets of strategies of how to observe,
valuate and invest. This highly original book will be of interest
to scholars of economics, sociology and political science, and in
particular to all those with an interest in the sociology of
finance and the role of finance in the contemporary world.
Notwithstanding financial crises, global foreign exchange markets
have undergone a tremendous growth during the last two decades.
Foreign exchange (FX) is often thought of as a site where economic
actors exchange currencies for buying foreign goods or selling
goods in foreign countries, but the FX markets are better
understood as financial spheres, dominated by speculative actors. A
key question is how this huge global speculative sphere has
developed, and what maintains it. Thus far, global currency markets
have been largely neglected by the new approaches to finance, and
until now no study has existed to chart the interplay of their
structural evolution and their shape as knowledge spheres. This new
book offers a systematic study of FX markets from a knowledge
sociological perspective, empirically focussing on analysts within
these markets. It makes the argument that market structures are
reflected in, and become stabilised by, distinct cultures of
financial expertise. These cultures connect the actions and
perceptions of loosely coupled, globally distributed market
players, and establish shared sets of strategies of how to observe,
valuate and invest. This highly original book will be of interest
to scholars of economics, sociology and political science, and in
particular to all those with an interest in the sociology of
finance and the role of finance in the contemporary world.
A bold history of the rise of central banks, showing how
institutions designed to steady the ship of global finance have
instead become as destabilizing as they are dominant. While central
banks have gained remarkable influence over the past fifty years,
promising more stability, global finance has gone from crisis to
crisis. How do we explain this development? Drawing on original
sources ignored in previous research, The Rise of Central Banks
offers a groundbreaking account of the origins and consequences of
central banks' increasing clout over economic policy. Many
commentators argue that ideas drove change, indicating a shift in
the 1970s from Keynesianism to monetarism, concerned with
controlling inflation. Others point to the stagflation crises,
which put capitalists and workers at loggerheads. Capitalists won,
the story goes, then pushed deregulation and disinflation by
redistributing power from elected governments to markets and
central banks. Both approaches are helpful, but they share a
weakness. Abstracting from the evolving practices of central
banking, they provide inaccurate accounts of recent policy changes
and fail to explain how we arrived at the current era of easy money
and excessive finance. By comparing developments in the United
States, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Switzerland, Leon
Wansleben finds that central bankers' own policy innovations were
an important ingredient of change. These innovations allowed
central bankers to use privileged relationships with expanding
financial markets to govern the economy. But by relying on markets,
central banks fostered excessive credit growth and cultivated an
unsustainable version of capitalism. Through extensive archival
work and numerous interviews, Wansleben sheds new light on the
agency of bureaucrats and calls upon society and elected leaders to
direct these actors' efforts to more progressive goals.
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