ABSTRACT

Financialization is the increased influence of financial actors and logics on social and economic life, and is one of the key drivers transforming food systems and rural economies around the world. The premise of this book is that the actions of financial actors, and their financial logics, are transforming agri-food systems in profound ways. It is shown that although financialization is a powerful dynamic, some recent developments suggest that the rollout of financialization is contradictory and uneven in different spaces and markets. The book examines cases in which state regulation or re-regulation and social movement resistance are setting roadblocks or speed bumps in the path of financialization, resulting in a ‘cooling off’ of investment, as well as the other side of the argument where there is evidence of a ‘heating up’. The authors address not only the limits to financialization, but also the mechanisms through which financial entities are able to penetrate and re-shape agri-food industries.

This book provides both a comparative analysis of financialization blending, and empirical findings with conceptual insights. It explores the connection between financialization, food systems, and rural transformation by critically examining: the concept of financialization and how food and farming are being financialized; the impacts of financialization in the food industry; and financialization in farming and forestry – along with the impacts this has on rural people and communities. This is a timely book, bringing together concrete case studies, from around the globe, to reveal the operations and impacts of finance capital in the ‘space’ of agri-food.

part 21I|112 pages

How are food and farming being ‘financialized’?

chapter 2|19 pages

The concept of ‘financialization’

Criticisms and insights

chapter 4|23 pages

Strategic financialization?

The emergence of sovereign wealth funds in the global food system

chapter 5|23 pages

Opening the black boxes of finance-gone-farming

A global analysis of assetization
Edited ByStefan Ouma

chapter 6|25 pages

Farmland values

Media and public discourses around farmland investment in Canada and Australia
Edited ByAndré Magnan

part II|88 pages

Financialization of the food industry

chapter 7|21 pages

Riding on waves of crises

Finance, food, and political tumult in Egypt

chapter 8|20 pages

Financialization in Japanese agri-food regimes

Uncovering the role of sogo-shosha in global soy investment
Edited ByMidori Hiraga

chapter 9|22 pages

Poultry grabs and agri-food financialization

The case of JBS of Brazil

chapter 10|23 pages

Between cooperative and private equity capital in the Norwegian food sector

How do the corporate, cultural and political environments make a difference?
Edited ByReidar Almås

part III|99 pages

Financialization of farming and forestry

chapter 11|21 pages

Old roots, new shoots

Thickening the local histories of agri-food financialization

chapter 13|20 pages

The local counterparts of financialization

Organizational accomplishments of farm/land investments and sales

chapter 15|21 pages

Institutional investment in a multi-functional forested landscape

Neoliberalism and pragmatism in contemporary land conservation
Edited BySteven Wolf