학술논문

Financialised Capitalism: Crisis and Financial Expropriation.
Document Type
Article
Source
Historical Materialism. 2017, Vol. 25 Issue 1, p114-148. 35p. 8 Charts, 7 Graphs.
Subject
*CAPITALISM
*FINANCIALIZATION
*FINANCIAL crises
*MORTGAGE loans
*INVESTMENT banking
Language
ISSN
1465-4466
Abstract
The current crisis is one outcome of the financialisation of contemporary capitalism. It arose in the USA because of the enormous expansion of mortgage-lending, including to the poorest layers of the working class. It became general because of the trading of debt by financial institutions. Th ese phenomena are integral to financialisation. During the last three decades, large enterprises have turned to open markets to obtain finance, forcing banks to seek alternative sources of profit. One avenue has been provision of financial services to individual workers. Th is trend has been facilitated by the retreat of public provision from housing, pensions, education, and so on. A further avenue has been to adopt investment-banking practices in open financial markets. Th e extraction of financial profi ts directly out of personal income constitutes financial expropriation. Combined with investment-banking, it has catalysed the current gigantic crisis. More broadly, financialisation has sustained the emergence of new layers of rentiers, defined primarily through their relation to the financial system rather than ownership of loanable capital. Finally, financialisation has posed important questions regarding finance-capital and imperialism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]