ABSTRACT

WINNER of the BISA IPEG Book Prize 2015

https://www.bisa-ipeg.org/ipeg-book-prize-2015-winner-announced/ ;

Under the rubric of ‘financial inclusion’, lending to the poor –in both the global North and global South –has become a highly lucrative and rapidly expanding industry since the 1990s. A key inquiry of this book is what is ‘the financial’ in which the poor are asked to join. Instead of embracing the mainstream position that financial inclusion is a natural, inevitable and mutually beneficial arrangement, Debtfare States and the Poverty Industry suggests that the structural violence inherent to neoliberalism and credit-led accumulation have created and normalized a reality in which the working poor can no longer afford to live without expensive credit.

The book further transcends economic treatments of credit and debt by revealing how the poverty industry is extricably linked to the social power of money, the paradoxes in credit-led accumulation, and ‘debtfarism’. The latter refers to rhetorical and regulatory forms of governance that mediate and facilitate the expansion of the poverty industry and the reliance of the poor on credit to augment/replace their wages. Through a historically grounded analysis, the author examines various dimensions of the poverty industry ranging from the credit card, payday loan, and student loan industries in the United States to micro-lending and low-income housing finance industries in Mexico.

Providing a much-needed theorization of the politics of debt, Debtfare States and the Poverty Industry has wider implications of the increasing dependence of the poor on consumer credit across the globe, this book will be of very strong interest to students and scholars of Global Political Economy, Finance, Development Studies, Geography, Law, History, and Sociology.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781315761954, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lU6PHjyOzU

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

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part I|54 pages

Theorising money, credit and debtfare states

chapter 1|12 pages

Demystifying Money

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chapter 2|19 pages

The Power and Paradoxes of Credit

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chapter 3|21 pages

Debtfare States

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part II|92 pages

Debtfarism and the poverty industry in the United States

chapter 4|26 pages

Debtfarism and the Credit Card Industry

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chapter 5|29 pages

Debtfarism and the Student Loan Industry

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chapter 6|26 pages

Debtfarism and the Payday Loan Industry

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part III|83 pages

Debtfarism and the poverty industry in Mexico

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chapter 8|25 pages

Debtfarism and the Microfinance Industry

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chapter 9|25 pages

Debtfarism and the Housing Industry

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chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

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