Weberian Analysis of Business Groups and Financial Markets

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Business Groups
Business Milieux
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JBF
Category=JFF
Communitarian Relations
comparative capitalism
Competitive Superiority
COP=United States
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economic sociology
England's Relative Economic Decline
England’s Relative Economic Decline
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Frankfurt Stock Exchange
German Stock Exchanges
Gesellschaft Relations
Human Development Index
Impersonal Trust
Intercorporate Relations
Language_English
Leading Stock Exchanges
Max Weber's Sociology
Max Weber’s Sociology
moral economy
Nora Stern
oligopoly theory
Organizational Field
Organizational Population
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Parsonian Functionalism
Price_€100 and above
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Public Administration
Rational Choice Theory
Richard Swedberg
Simmel's Contributions
Simmel's Statements
Simmel’s Contributions
Simmel’s Statements
social norms in finance
sociological analysis of East Asian markets
softlaunch
South Korean Business Groups
South Korean Groups
Specific Production Domains
Stock Exchange Brokers
trust in financial markets
Weber's Times
Weber’s Times

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815387411
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Nov 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Moral economy, as a set of rules which regulate market transactions, has been the object of much research and debate since the 1980s; it has also been the focus of classical sociological authors such as Weber, Simmel and Toennies. Weber in particular examined the rules of the moral economy in the financial markets, and this volume sheds light on his contribution to the subject. The book formulates two models of business relations - one oligopolistic model, the other based on free competition - which are derived from Weber and Simmel's writings and which represent alternative instances of the moral economy. Empirical case studies in the form of South Korea and Taiwan are included to exemplify the two models and to highlight the consequences of adopting one model over the other. The volume also examines the conduct of actors in some of the leading financial markets, with reference to Weber's writings on the 19th century London and Berlin Stock Exchanges.

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