ABSTRACT

The current financial and sovereign debt crisis of the European Union and the United States can be regarded as the most recent of a wave of financial and sovereign debt crises that have affected different regions of the world over the past quarter century. While there is a large and growing body of literature on the economic aspects of financial crises, its political elements remain surprisingly under-studied.

Moments of Truth: The Politics of Financial Crises in Comparative Perspective fills this gap in the literature by looking at the political repercussions and policy implications of financial crises in comparative perspective, using case studies in Latin America, Korea, and Russia, as well as the contemporary crises in the US and in key European countries. Contributors to this volume look at the crises as critical junctures that generate high levels of uncertainty while calling for decisive action. The chapters emphasize structural or agency based explanations and give relevance to the role of ideas, interests, and institutions in explaining different outcomes. The questions addressed by the case studies include: how the crises were defined by key actors, the range of political and policy options available to deal with their impact, the role of ideas in policy shifts, how political and economic actors redefine their interests in contexts of uncertainty,  how political institutions mediate reactions to the crises, what explains the choice of a certain option over other alternatives, and whether the crisis has (so far) resulted in significant political and policy changes or in incremental adjustments to the status quo.

The first book to comparatively analyze the political dimensions of financial crises across different global regions, Moments of Truth will be highly significant for any scholars interested in the contemporary debate on financial crises.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Crises as Moments of Truth 1

chapter 1|16 pages

Crises and Their Consequences in Latin America

Mexico in 1982 and 1994 and Venezuela in 1994

chapter 2|20 pages

“Everybody Out,” “We Are Fantastic:”

The Politics of Financial Crises in Argentina and Uruguay 2001–2003

chapter 3|13 pages

After Neoliberal Constitutionalism

Financial Crisis and State Resurgence in Russia and Argentina

chapter 4|22 pages

The Neoliberalization of South Korea after the 1997 Economic Crisis

A Cultural Political Economy of Crisis Discourse and Management 1

chapter 5|19 pages

The United States

Institutional Continuities, Reform, and “Critical Junctures”

chapter 6|19 pages

Financialization, Financial Crisis, and Deficit Hysteria

Neoliberalism Redux

chapter 7|20 pages

A Critical Juncture in EU Integration?

The Eurozone Crisis and Its Management 2010–2012

chapter 8|18 pages

The Trouble with Economic Reform

Understanding the Debt Crisis in Spain and Italy

chapter 9|19 pages

Greece and the Recent Financial Crisis

Meltdown or Configuration?

chapter 10|17 pages

The Promise and Peril of Smallness in World Markets 1

The Case of Financial Crisis in Denmark

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion