ABSTRACT

Drawing on the history of modern finance, as well as the sociology of money and risk, this book examines how cultural understandings of finance have contributed to the increased capitalization of the UK financial system following the Global Financial Crisis. Providing both a geographically-inflected analysis and re-appraisal of the concept of performativity, it demonstrates that financial risk management has a spatiality that helps to inform understandings and imaginaries of the risks associated with money and finance.

The book traces the development of understandings of risk at the Bank of England, with an analysis that spans some 1,000 reports, documents and speeches alongside elite interviews with past and present employees at the central bank. The author argues that the Bank has moved from a relatively broad-brush approach to the risks being managed in the financial sector, to a greater preoccupation with the understanding and mapping of the mobilization of financial risk.

The study of financial practices from a critical social sciences and humanities perspective has grown rapidly since the Global Financial Crisis and this book will be of interest to multiple subject areas including IPE, economic geography, sociology of finance and critical security studies.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Financial stability as speculative security

part I|52 pages

Performing money cultures in London

chapter 1|19 pages

London and the Bank of England

chapter 2|14 pages

Money cultures

chapter 3|17 pages

Central banking as a performed domain

part 71II|38 pages

A money culture of speculating on risk

chapter 4|15 pages

Completing credit markets?

chapter 5|21 pages

A fatal flaw

part 109III|62 pages

A money culture of speculating for risk

chapter 6|18 pages

Putting risk under a microscope

chapter 7|23 pages

Widening the risk imagination

chapter 8|19 pages

Capitalization and resilience

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

Financial stability in the twenty-first century