FGV Digital Repository
    • português (Brasil)
    • English
    • español
      Visit:
    • FGV Digital Library
    • FGV Scientific Journals
  • English 
    • português (Brasil)
    • English
    • español
  • Login
View Item 
  •   DSpace Home
  • FGV EESP - Escola de Economia de São Paulo
  • FGV EESP - Centro de Estudos
  • FGV EESP - CND - Centro de Estudos do Novo Desenvolvimentismo
  • FGV EESP - CND - Papers
  • View Item
  •   DSpace Home
  • FGV EESP - Escola de Economia de São Paulo
  • FGV EESP - Centro de Estudos
  • FGV EESP - CND - Centro de Estudos do Novo Desenvolvimentismo
  • FGV EESP - CND - Papers
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse

All of DSpaceFGV Communities & CollectionsAuthorsAdvisorSubjectTitlesBy Issue DateKeywordsThis CollectionAuthorsAdvisorSubjectTitlesBy Issue DateKeywords

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

The revenge of the market on the rentiers why neo-liberal reports of the end of history turned out to be premature

Thumbnail
View/Open
Text - Palma - The Revenge of the Market on the Rentiers.pdf (1.645Mb)
Date
2009-07
Author
Palma, José Gabriel
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
Starting from the perspective of heterodox Keynesian-Minskyian-Kindlebergian financial economics, this paper begins by highlighting a number of mechanisms that contributed to the current financial crisis. These include excess liquidity, income polarisation, conflicts between financial and productive capital, lack of intelligent regulation, asymmetric information, principal-agent dilemmas and bounded rationalities. However, the paper then proceeds to argue that perhaps more than ever the ‘macroeconomics’ that led to this crisis only makes analytical sense if examined within the framework of the political settlements and distributional outcomes in which it had operated. Taking the perspective of critical social theories the paper concludes that, ultimately, the current financial crisis is the outcome of something much more systemic, namely an attempt to use neo-liberalism (or, in US terms, neo-conservatism) as a new technology of power to help transform capitalism into a rentiers’ delight. And in particular, into a system without much ‘compulsion’ on big business; i.e., one that imposes only minimal pressures on big agents to engage in competitive struggles in the real economy (while inflicting exactly the opposite fate on workers and small firms). A key component in the effectiveness of this new technology of power was its ability to transform the state into a major facilitator of the ever-increasing rent-seeking practices of oligopolistic capital. The architects of this experiment include some capitalist groups (in particular rentiers from the financial sector as well as capitalists from the ‘mature’ and most polluting industries of the preceding techno-economic paradigm), some political groups, as well as intellectual networks with their allies – including most economists and the ‘new’ left. Although rentiers did succeed in their attempt to get rid of practically all fetters on their greed, in the end the crisis materialised when ‘markets’ took their inevitable revenge on the rentiers by calling their (blatant) bluff.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10438/16287
Collections
  • FGV EESP - CND - Papers [49]
Knowledge Areas
Economia
Subject
Neoliberalismo
Keyword
Ideology
Neoliberalism
Neoconservatism
Foucault
Causes of financial crisis
Investment
Risk
Uncertainty
Income distribution
Rent-seeking

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 


DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 

Import Metadata