ABSTRACT

The recent financial crisis exposed both a naïve faith in mathematical models to manage risk and a crude culture of greed that embraces risk. This book explores cultures of finance in sites such as corporate governance, hedge funds, central banks, the City of London and Wall Street, and small and medium enterprises. It uses different methods to explore these cultures and their interaction with different financial orders to improve our understanding of financial crisis dynamics.

The introduction identifies types of cultural turn in studies of finance. Part I outlines relevant research methods, including comparison of national cultures viewed as independent variables, cultural political economy, and critical discourse and narrative policy analysis. Part II examines different institutional cultures of finance and the cult of entrepreneurship. Part III offers historical, comparative, and contemporary analyses of financial regimes and their significance for crisis dynamics. Part IV explores organizational cultures, modes of calculation, and financial practices and how they shape economic performance and guide crisis management. Part V considers crisis construals and responses in the European Union and China.

This book’s great strength is its multi-faceted approach to cultures of finance. Contributors deploy the cultural turn creatively to enhance comparative and historical analysis of financial regimes, institutions, organizations, and practices as well as their roles in crisis generation, construal, and management. Developing different paradigms and methods and elaborating diverse case studies, the authors illustrate not only how and why ‘culture matters’ but also how its significance is shaped by different financial regimes and contexts.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

part I|58 pages

Researching cultures of finance

chapter 3|19 pages

Culture as discursive practice

Combining cultural political economy and discursive political studies in investigations of the financial crisis

part II|60 pages

Cultures of finance

chapter 4|21 pages

What price culture?

Calculation, commensuration, contingency, and authority in financial practices 1

part III|46 pages

Cultural factors in financial crisis generation

part IV|61 pages

Economic imaginaries, financial calculation, and crisis dynamics

chapter 12|21 pages

A cultural political economy of financial imaginaries

The (re-)making of ‘BRIC' and the case of China

part V|64 pages

Crisis construals and responses to financial crisis in Europe

chapter 13|25 pages

Culture matters

French–German conflicts on European central bank independence and crisis resolution

chapter 15|21 pages

Mark my words

Discursive central banking in crisis