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. 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. Both approaches are helpful, but they share a weakness. Capitalists won, the story goes, then pushed deregulation and disinflation by redistributing power from elected governments to markets and central banks. Others point to the stagflation crises, which put capitalists and workers at loggerheads. Many commentators argue that ideas drove change, indicating a shift in the 1970s from Keynesianism to monetarism, concerned with controlling inflation. 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. While central banks have gained remarkable influence over the past fifty years, promising more stability, global finance has gone from crisis to crisis. Leon Wansleben, Harvard University Press 2023. The Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |