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Democracy and Diversity in Financial Market Regulation

By (author) Nicholas Dorn
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd, London, United Kingdom
Imprint: Routledge
Published: 24th Apr 2016
Dimensions: w 156mm h 234mm
Weight: 328g
ISBN-10: 1138685895
ISBN-13: 9781138685895
Barcode No: 9781138685895
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Synopsis
Financial markets have become acknowledged as a source of crisis, and discussion of them has shifted from economics, through legal and regulatory studies, to politics. Events from 2008 onwards raise important, cross-disciplinary questions: must financial markets drive states into political and existential crisis, must public finances take over private losses, must citizens endure austerity? This book argues that there is an alternative. If the financial system were less 'connected', contagion within the market would be reduced and crises would become more localised and intermittent, less global and pervasive. The question then becomes how to reduce connectedness within financial markets. This book argues that the democratic direction of financial market policies can deliver this. Politicising financial market policies - taking discussion of these issues out of the sphere of the 'technical' and putting it into the same democratically contested space as, for example, health and welfare policies - would encourage differing policies to emerge in different countries. Diversity of regulatory regimes would result in some business models being attracted to some jurisdictions, others to others. The resulting heterogeneity, when viewed from a global perspective, would be a reversal of recent and current tendencies towards one single/global 'level playing field', within which all financial firms and sectors have become closely connected and across which contagion inevitably reigns. No doubt the democratisation of financial market policy would be opposed by big firms - their interests being served by regulatory convergence - and considered macabre by some financial regulators and central bankers, who are coalescing into an elite community. However, everyone else, Nicholas Dorn argues here, would be better off in a financial world characterised by greater diversity.

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'A timely challenge to technocratic group think and an important argument for more democratic and diverse regulation'

Karel Williams, CRESC and Manchester Business School, UK

'Dorn places financial markets in historical, cultural and political context, returning us to questions about the purpose of finance, all the more pressing in today's Europe'

Matjaz Jager, Faculty of Law, Ljubljana, Slovenia

"Drawing from legal, political, anthropological and sociological scholarship, the single thread which ties together Dorn's material is an original and radically counter-intuitive argument... a compelling introduction to the state of play in global financial regulation."

Nathan Coombs, University of Edinburgh 'A timely challenge to technocratic group think and an important argument for more democratic and diverse regulation'

Karel Williams, CRESC and Manchester Business School, UK

'Dorn places financial markets in historical, cultural and political context, returning us to questions about the purpose of finance, all the more pressing in today's Europe'

Matjaz Jager, Faculty of Law, Ljubljana, Slovenia

'Dorn pulls off that rare feat of presenting an argument capable of eliciting the interest of interdisciplinary researchers while also being grounded in an appreciation for the intricacies of the regulatory sphere.'

Nathan Coombs, University of Edinburgh, UK