The Everyday Life of Global Finance: Saving and Borrowing in Anglo-America
Paul Langley
Abstract
Grounded in literature from the sociology of finance and international political economy, and informed by extensive empirical research, this book explores the unprecedented relationships that now bind Anglo-American society with the financial markets. As mutual funds have increased in popularity and pension provision has been transformed, many more individuals and households have come to invest in stocks and shares. As consumer borrowing has risen dramatically and mortgage finance has embraced those deemed sub-prime, so the repayments of credit card holders and mortgagors have provided the bas ... More
Grounded in literature from the sociology of finance and international political economy, and informed by extensive empirical research, this book explores the unprecedented relationships that now bind Anglo-American society with the financial markets. As mutual funds have increased in popularity and pension provision has been transformed, many more individuals and households have come to invest in stocks and shares. As consumer borrowing has risen dramatically and mortgage finance has embraced those deemed sub-prime, so the repayments of credit card holders and mortgagors have provided the basis for the issue and trading of bonds and other market instruments. This book shows how financial market networks have come to extend well beyond Wall Street and the City of London, becoming embedded and embodied in routine saving and borrowing in the US and UK. Society's new-found relationships with the markets are also shown, however, to be marked by stark inequalities, manifest contradictions, and political dissent.
Keywords:
sociology of finance,
international political economy,
Anglo-American society,
mutual funds,
pension provision,
consumer borrowing,
mortgage finance,
sub-prime
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2008 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199236596 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2008 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199236596.001.0001 |