ABSTRACT

Since 2008, the financial sector has been the subject of extensive criticism. Much of this criticism has focused on the morality of the actors involved in the crisis and its extended aftermath. This book analyses the key moral and political philosophical issues of the crisis and relates them to the political economy of finance. It also examines to what extent the financial sector can or should be reformed.

This book is unified by the view that the financial sector had been a self-serving and self-regulating elite consumed by greed, speculation and even lawlessness, with little sense of responsibility to the wider society or common good. In light of critical analysis by authors from a variety of backgrounds and persuasions, suggestions for reform and improvement are proposed, in some cases radical reform. By placing the world of finance under a microscope, this book analyses the assumptions that have led from hubris to disgrace as it provides suggestions for an improved society.

Rooted in philosophical reflection, this book invites a critical reassessment of finance and its societal role in the 21st century. This book will be of interest to academics, politicians, central bankers and financial regulators who wish to improve the morality of finance.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

The nadir of 2008 and its aftermath

chapter 2|16 pages

Asset management

Some considerations on performance

chapter 4|27 pages

Financialisation

chapter 6|17 pages

“We're still dancing”

Stakeholder expectation and its role in decision making in the financial sector

chapter 8|37 pages

China as cause and victim of the US subprime crisis

The crisis and its impact on China and the Asian economies

chapter 9|66 pages

Default invariance

A naïve category theory of law and finance

chapter 11|13 pages

Neologism as theoretical innovation in economics

The case of “financialisation”

chapter 12|16 pages

Ethics

From negative regulations to fidelity to the event

chapter 13|17 pages

The bank, its societal functions and its practices

Conflictual relationships between an economic agent and democracy

chapter 14|10 pages

The sufficiency economy

A Thai response to financial excesses

chapter 15|22 pages

Ethics should not cloud business or financial decisions

The enduring power of the neoclassical paradigm

chapter 16|12 pages

Regulation and fraud

A critical assessment of accounting information, corporate governance and complex systems of business control

chapter 18|22 pages

Financial liberalism and new institutional environment

The 2007–08 financial crisis as a (de)regulatory deadlock

chapter 19|27 pages

Naturalising techniques and naturalised discourses

Thoughts on the media's role in the Great Recession

chapter 21|14 pages

Heated debates and cool analysis

Thinking well about financial ethics

chapter 22|14 pages

Developing country perspectives

A look at the Nigerian banking sector crisis

chapter 24|15 pages

Whither finance now?