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What is the relationship between the financial system and politics?
In a democratic system, what kind of control should elected
governments have over the financial markets? What policies should
be implemented to regulate them? What is the role played by
different elites--financial, technocratic, and political--in the
operation and regulation of the financial system? And what role
should citizens, investors, and savers play?
These are some of the questions addressed in this challenging
analysis of the particular features of the contemporary capitalist
economy in Britain, the USA, and Western Europe. The authors argue
that the causes of the financial crisis lay in the bricolage and
innovation in financial markets, resulting in long chains and
circuits of transactions and instruments that enabled bankers to
earn fees, but which did not sufficiently take into account system
risk, uncertainty, and unintended consequences.
In the wake of the crisis, the authors argue that social
scientists, governments, and citizens need to re-engage with the
political dimensions of financial markets. This book offers a
controversial and accessible exploration of the disorders of our
financial capitalism and its justifications. With an innovative
emphasis on the economically 'undisclosed' and the political
'mystifying', it combines technical understanding of finance,
cultural analysis, and al political account of interests and
institutions.
This is the first ever book to analyse outsourcing - contracting
out public services to private business interests. It is an
unacknowledged revolution in the British economy, and it has
happened quietly, but it is creating powerful new corporate
interests, transforming the organisation of government at all
levels, and is simultaneously enriching a new business elite and
creating numerous fiascos in the delivery of public services. What
links the brutal treatment of asylum seeking detainees, the
disciplining of welfare benefit claimants, the profits effortlessly
earned by the privatised rail companies, and the fiasco of the
management of security at the 2012 Olympics? In a word:
outsourcing. This book, by the renowned research team at the Centre
for Research on Socio Cultural Change in Manchester, is the first
to combine 'follow the money' research with accessibility for the
engaged citizen, and the first to balance critique with practical
suggestions for policy reform. -- .
This is the first ever book to analyse outsourcing – contracting
out public services to private business interests. It is an
unacknowledged revolution in the British economy, and it has
happened quietly, but it is creating powerful new corporate
interests, transforming the organisation of government at all
levels, and is simultaneously enriching a new business elite and
creating numerous fiascos in the delivery of public services. What
links the brutal treatment of asylum-seeking detainees, the
disciplining of welfare benefit claimants, the profits effortlessly
earned by the privatised rail companies, and the fiasco of the
management of security at the 2012 Olympics? In a word:
outsourcing. This book, by the renowned research team at the Centre
for Research on Socio-Cultural Change in Manchester, is the first
to combine ‘follow the money’ research with accessibility for
the engaged citizen, and the first to balance critique with
practical suggestions for policy reform. -- .
For thirty years, the British economy has repeated the same old
experiment of subjecting everything to competition and market
because that is what works in the imagination of central
government. This book demonstrates the repeated failure of that
experiment by detailed examination of three sectors: broadband,
food supply and retail banking. The book argues for a new
experiment in social licensing whereby the right to trade in
foundational activities would be dependent on the discharge of
social obligations in the form of sourcing, training and living
wages. Written by a team of researchers and policy advocates based
at the Centre for Research on Socio Cultural Change, this book
combines rigour and readability, and will be relevant to
practitioners, policy makers, academics and engaged citizens. -- .
This book represents the first comparative study of how health
policy is made in leading industrial nations. Using detailed case
histories of the UK, the US and Germany, it shows that health care
systems and modern states are indissolubly bound together. The
author explains how the health care state originated before the
rise of democracy, and demonstrates that it has had to confront the
twin pressures of democratic politics and competitive capitalism.
It focuses on three important arenas of health care politics--the
government of consumption, the government of doctors, and the
government of medical technology--and illustrates how these three
arenas intersect.
This book contains all you wish to know about amassing 'treasure'
on the cheap. From an 18TH century Chelsea porcelain figurine
acquired by the author for 20 pence at a jumble sale, to a Charles
II commemorative copper box full of English hammered silver coinage
found, once again. by the author, in the foreshore of the muddy
river Thames in the heart of London. Lavishly illustrated with many
discoveries made between the years of 1970 to 2004, wonderful
objects, and all acquired from hunting treasure on a true
shoestring budget..
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