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E-book

Title The intellectual origins of the global financial crisis / edited by Roger Berkowitz and Taun N. Toay
Edition 1st ed
Published New York : Fordham University Press, 2012

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Description 1 online resource (ix, 217 pages)
Contents Introduction The Burden of Our Times -- Part I: Hannah Arendt and the Burden of Our Times. Can Arendt's Discussion of Imperialism Help Us Understand the Current Financial Crisis? -- "no Revolution Required" -- Judging the Financial Crisis -- Part II: Business Values and the Financial Crisis. Capitalism, Ethics, and the Financial Crash -- An Interview with Paul Levy -- An Interview with Vincent Mai -- Brazil as a Model? -- An Interview with Raymundo Maqliano Filho -- Round Table: The Burden of Our Times -- Part III: The Crisis of Economics. The Roots of the Crisis -- Where Keynes Went Wrong -- Managed Money, the "Great Recession," and Beyond -- Turning the Economy into a Casino -- Part IV The Origins of the Financial Crisis From Nationalism to Neoliberalism. Capitalism: Neither Problem Nor Solution-But Temporary Victim of the Financial Crisis -- Retrieving Chance: Neoliberalism, Finance Capitalism, and the Antinomies of Governmental Reason -- The End of Neoliberalism? -- Short-Term Thinking -- Can There Be a People's Commons? The Significance of Rosa Luxemburg's Accumulation of Capital -- An Economic Epilogue
Summary "From easy money to greed, there is no shortage of explanations for the global financial crisis that began in 2008. Some even deny it is a crisis, arguing that the Great Recession is just one of the many busts that are inevitable in the boom and bust cycle that plagues capitalist economies. Yet the claim that the financial crisis is just part of capitalism is an evasion that refuses to make judgments about the individual and collective actions that helped make this particular crisis possible. This book brings together philosophers, businessmen, economists, political theorists, and historians to ask after the cultural and intellectual transformations that underlie this particular crisis. Grounded in the thinking of Hannah Arendt, the essays touch upon Max Weber, Karl Marx, Adam Smith, John Maynard Keynes, and Michel Foucault. Some essays trace the rise of economic thinking and the decline of political judgment. Others explore how Keynesian economics is either a cause or a cure of the financial crisis. And still others ask pointed questions about contemporary business practices and the culture of financial capitalism. As a whole, the volume raises fundamental questions about the intellectual foundations of the global financial crisis."--Publisher's abstract
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009.
Financial crises -- Philosophy
Economics -- Philosophy
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economic History.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economics -- General.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Reference.
Economics -- Philosophy
Form Electronic book
Author Berkowitz, Roger, 1968-
Toay, Taun N
ISBN 9780823250752
082325075X
9780823250400
0823250407
0823249611
9780823249619
9780823249633
0823249638