2017
DOI: 10.1080/20954816.2016.1274520
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Financialisation in emerging economies: a systematic overview and comparison with Anglo-Saxon economies

Abstract: Financialisation research has originally focussed on the US experience, but the concept is now increasingly applied to emerging economies (EMEs). There is a rich literature stressing peculiarities of individual country experiences, but little systematic comparison across EMEs. This paper fills this gap, providing an overview of the debate and identifying six financialisation interpretations for EMEs. These different interpretations stress (1) financial deregulation (2) foreign financial inflows, (3) asset pric… Show more

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Cited by 126 publications
(110 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…The aspects investigated include the increased holdings of financial assets and market funding by large nonfinancial corporations (NFCs) (Orhangazi, 2008;Stockhammer, 2004); the importance of shareholder value (Lazonick and O'Sullivan, 2000); the rising involvement of households in predatory debt relations (Aalbers, 2008;Dymski, 2010;Montgomerie, 2009); the changing income pattern of banks, from deposits and lending to fees and commissions (Erturk and Solari, 2007;dos Santos, 2009); the rise in bank funding from markets rather than from deposit taking (Lapavitsas, 2009); and the financialization of everyday life (Langley, 2008). Similar phenomena have also been highlighted in DEEs: see Bonizzi (2013) and Karwowski and Stockhammer (2017) for overviews. For example, Akkemik andÖzen (2014), Correa et al (2012), Powell (2013) and Rethel (2010) show the increased involvement of DEE NFCs with (international) financial markets.…”
Section: Putting the International Into Financializationsupporting
confidence: 65%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The aspects investigated include the increased holdings of financial assets and market funding by large nonfinancial corporations (NFCs) (Orhangazi, 2008;Stockhammer, 2004); the importance of shareholder value (Lazonick and O'Sullivan, 2000); the rising involvement of households in predatory debt relations (Aalbers, 2008;Dymski, 2010;Montgomerie, 2009); the changing income pattern of banks, from deposits and lending to fees and commissions (Erturk and Solari, 2007;dos Santos, 2009); the rise in bank funding from markets rather than from deposit taking (Lapavitsas, 2009); and the financialization of everyday life (Langley, 2008). Similar phenomena have also been highlighted in DEEs: see Bonizzi (2013) and Karwowski and Stockhammer (2017) for overviews. For example, Akkemik andÖzen (2014), Correa et al (2012), Powell (2013) and Rethel (2010) show the increased involvement of DEE NFCs with (international) financial markets.…”
Section: Putting the International Into Financializationsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Similar phenomena have also been highlighted in DEEs: see Bonizzi () and Karwowski and Stockhammer () for overviews. For example, Akkemik and Özen (), Correa et al.…”
Section: Putting the International Into Financializationsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…The Macedonian government, however, who had spearheaded the process of financialization, could rely on international interlocutors to leverage the country's low debt and geostrategic importance to control the domestic money and credit supply. Substituting the violence generated by globally fast or abstract financial flows (Carruthers & Stinchcombe 1999) with forms of domestic forced credit, the Macedonian path supports Karwowski and Stockhammer's (2016) intuition that peripheral financialization is not only a residual economic landscape produced by profit-seeking switches in capital flow (Aalbers 2008). In Macedonia, and perhaps other southern ex-Yugoslav countries, peripheral financialization has become a crucial feature of an illiberal statecraft project (see also Bruff 2014;Konings 2016).…”
Section: Peripheral Financialization and The Macedonian Pathmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Crashed details the crisis responses in Russia, China and to a lesser extent South Korea but a more detailed assessment of the hoped‐for growth potential of EMEs would have been desirable. Just like rich economies these countries have been increasingly affected by the growing power of finance — they too have been facing financialization (Karwowski and Stockhammer, ). Given the very different international status of their currencies EMEs are more vulnerable to these changes in financial markets.…”
Section: Conclusion: the Shape Of Things To Comementioning
confidence: 99%