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  The Governance of Financialization in Latin America and East Asia: Empowering Expertise

Nagel, M. (2024). The Governance of Financialization in Latin America and East Asia: Empowering Expertise. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781003414858.

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https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003414858 (Publisher version)
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 Creators:
Nagel, Max1, 2, Author                 
Affiliations:
1Projekte von Gastwissenschaftlern und Postdoc-Stipendiaten, MPI for the Study of Societies, Max Planck Society, ou_1214554              
2IAW Institute for Labour and Economy, University of Bremen, Germany, ou_persistent22              

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 Abstract: The Governance of Financialization in Latin America and East Asia analyses how states in these areas have adopted different monetary, financial, and foreign exchange policies to govern financialization, which have induced varying levels of state control over financial markets.

The book analyzes the puzzling observation of policy divergence by investigating how countries have reacted differently to major financial crises since the 1970s. It shows how Argentina and Japan selected a governance approach to financialization that followed Western prescriptions by propelling unregulated financialization; but also how Chile and South Korea, by contrast, crafted policies to reduce the negative effects of financialization on economic development and financial stability. The book identifies variegated expertise in central banks, ministries of finance, expert commissions, and research institutions that has informed policymaking across Argentina, Chile, Japan, and South Korea since the 1970s. It then demonstrates how governments have used experts to achieve diverse political objectives and explains how governments can use experts to enhance state agency to counter globalization pressures.

This book will appeal to scholars of International Political Economy, comparative politics, economics, sociology, development studies, and Latin American and East Asian history. It will also be of interest to economists and policymakers who want to safeguard financial stability and promote economic growth.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2023-10-202024
 Publication Status: Issued
 Pages: 230
 Publishing info: London : Routledge
 Table of Contents: List of figures
List of tables
Acknowledgments
List of abbreviations and acronyms

1 State agency in times of globalization
1.1 Central banks as depoliticized policy institutions
1.2 Financialization after the fall of Bretton Woods: comparing the four cases
1.3 Political agency and expert agency
1.4 Structure of the book

2 Explaining policy divergence and policy change
2.1 Dissecting policy change under globalization: essential theories
2.2 Empowering expertise to govern financialization

3 Chile: Preserving dictatorships and democracies through financial stability
3.1 Chile under developmentalism and Pinochet's turn to the Chicago Boys in 1973
3.2 Pinochet under pressure: undogmatic policy change under Hernán Büchi
3.3 Concertación's rejection of developmentalism and unexpected alignment with Pinochet's policies
3.4 Developing policies for maintaining financial stability
3.4.1 Monetary policy
3.4.2 Financial policy
3.4.3 Foreign exchange policy
3.5 Conclusion

4 Argentina: Ideologies and failed policy experiments
4.1 Developmentalism and financialization during the Proceso
4.2 Cavallo's Convertibilidad experiment
4.2.1 Monetary policy and foreign exchange policy
4.2.2 Financial policy
4.3 Néstor Kirchner: forging compromise
4.3.1 Monetary policy
4.3.2 Financial policy
4.3.3 Foreign exchange policy
4.4 Fernández de Kirchner's return to developmental policy
4.4.1 Monetary policy
4.4.2 Finanical policy
4.4.3 Foreign exchange policy
4.5 Macri: reinstating neoliberalism
4.5.1 Monetary policy
4.5.2 Financial policy
4.5.3 Foreign exchange policy
4.6 Conclusion

Intermediary section
5 South Korea: Overcoming authoritarian developmentalism, safeguarding financial stability
5.1 South Korean developmentalism (1945-93) and financialization under Kim Young-sam (1993-98)
5.2 Developing a financial stability policy framework: post-1998
5.2.1 Monetary policy
5.2.2 Financial policy
5.2.3 Foreign exchange policy
5.3 Lee Myung-bak's turn
5.3.1 Monetary policy
5.3.2 Financial policy
5.3.3 Foreign exchange policy
5.4 Conclusion

6 Japan: Government control through institutional reforms
6.1 Japanese developmentalism (1945-82) and initial financial liberalization in the 1980s
6.2 Hashimoto and Koizumi's neoliberal reforms
6.2.1 Monetary policy
6.2.2 Financial policy
6.3 Expert agency under the compromise governor Shirakawa
6.3.1 Monetary policy
6.3.2 Financial policy
6.4 Abe's monetarism
6.4.1 Monetary policy
6.4.2 Financial policy
6.4.3 Foreign exchange policy
6.5 Conclusion

7 How government-expert relations produce state agency and propel divergence
7.1 Discussion of the findings from the comparative analysis
7.2 Empirical and theoretical contributions
7.3 Alternative and complementary explanations
7.4 Policy implications
7.5 A new era? COVID-19, Ukraine, China, and the return of inflation

Bibliography
Index
 Rev. Type: -
 Identifiers: ISBN: 978-1-032-54037-5
ISBN: 978-1-032-54039-9
ISBN: 978-1-003-41485-8
DOI: 10.4324/9781003414858
 Degree: -

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Title: RIPE Series in Global Political Economy
Source Genre: Series
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