2013
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2532364
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Who Cares About Financialization? Explaining the Decline in Political Salience of Active Markets for Corporate Control

Abstract: Why is unprecedented financialization failing to provoke a strong political backlash? The role of financial markets, motives, actors, and institutions has expanded continuously in recent decades, but -contrary to Polanyi's "double movement" theory and despite the current financial crisis -market-containment efforts have grown weaker over time. The present paper approaches this puzzle by explaining how the practice of corporate takeover bids gradually gained political acceptance in the United Kingdom from the 1… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Until recently, attempts to answer these questions have been largely confined to the realm of individual social sciences (for an example, see Callaghan 2013). However, some pertinent issues require a collaboration of economics, sociology and political science.…”
Section: "Do You Really Think That the Theories And Principles That Mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Until recently, attempts to answer these questions have been largely confined to the realm of individual social sciences (for an example, see Callaghan 2013). However, some pertinent issues require a collaboration of economics, sociology and political science.…”
Section: "Do You Really Think That the Theories And Principles That Mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Politically, power relations at the European level, particularly during the implementation phase of legal norms (Young 2014), are strongly dominated by the lobbying power of financial market actors, clearly more strongly than on the national level, even if on the latter mobilisation against financialisation is remarkably limited (Callaghan, 2014). Moreover, the heterogeneity of the member states with regard to their degree and pattern of financialisation, as documented in section 2 above, poses strong political limits towards fundamental de-financialisation.…”
Section: Political Options For De-financialisation In Europementioning
confidence: 99%