Discipline in the Global Economy?

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A01=Jakob Vestergaard
asian
Asian Crisis
Asian financial crisis analysis
Author_Jakob Vestergaard
banking supervision standards
Barry Eichengreen
Capital Account Liberalization
Capital Adequacy Ratios
Category=KCL
consensus
crisis
Disciplinary Power
end
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Exchange Rate
Fi Nancial Crises
Fi Nancial Markets
Fi Nancial Regulation
Fi Nancial System
Fi Ve
financial
Financial Sector Assessment Programme
Foucault disciplinary power
Foucault's Analysis
Foucault’s Analysis
global economic governance critique
IFA
IMF
Individual Financial Institution
international
International Fi Nancial
International Fi Nancial Architecture
International Fi Nancial System
International Finance
international financial regulation
liberalism
neoliberal governance
post-washington
post-Washington Consensus
regulation
Robert Wade
system
Thai Central Bank
Thai Crisis
Wade 1998a

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415536608
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Feb 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In Discipline in the Global Economy, Jakob Vestergaard investigates the currently prevailing regulation of international finance, launched in response to the financial crises of the 1990’s. At the core of this approach is a set of standards of ‘best practice’, ranging from banking supervision to corporate governance. Vestergaard argues that although these standards are presented as ‘international’, they comprise a norm for the ‘proper’ organization and regulation of economies which is intimately related to the Anglo-American model of capitalism. With this approach to the regulation of international finance, previous deregulation policies were replaced by a comprehensive system for the global disciplining of economies. This is a remarkable, if not paradoxical, occurrence in what is allegedly the heyday of neoliberalism and ‘free market economy’. Moreover, this mode of international financial regulation has proved ineffective, if not counter-productive, in terms of its objective to enhance the stability and resilience of the international financial system. Only by abandoning ‘laissez-fairy tales’ about liberalism may we begin to understand our present predicament– and open a space for critical thinking on modes of international economic governance that are at the same time more conducive to financial stability and more in line with the ethos of liberalism.

Jakob Vestergaard has an M.Sc. in Economics (University of Copenhagen) and PhD in International Political Economy (Copenhagen Business School). Before taking up his current position as Project Researcher at the Danish Institute of International Studies (DIIS), he was ESRC Post Doctorial Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) and Assistant Professor at the Copenhagen Business School. .

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