Description

Book Synopsis

Government bailouts; negative interest rates and markets that do not behave as economic models tell us they should; new populist and nationalist movements that target central banks and central bankers as a source of popular malaise; new regional organizations and geopolitical alignments laying claim to authority over the global economy; households, consumers, and workers facing increasingly intolerable levels of inequality: These dramatic conditions seem to cry out for new ways of understanding the purposes, roles, and challenges of central banks and financial governance more generally. Financial Citizenship reveals that the conflicts about who gets to decide how central banks do all these things, and about whether central banks are acting in everyone's interest when they do them, are in large part the product of a culture clash between experts and the various global publics that have a stake in what central banks do.

Expertscentral bankers, regulators, market insiders, and th

Trade Review

Annelise Riles makes a powerful case for this re-engineering of the argument for central-bank independence.

* Survival *

Financial Citizenship

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    A Paperback / softback by Annelise Riles

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      Publisher: Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 15/07/2018
      ISBN13: 9781501732720, 978-1501732720
      ISBN10: 1501732722

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Government bailouts; negative interest rates and markets that do not behave as economic models tell us they should; new populist and nationalist movements that target central banks and central bankers as a source of popular malaise; new regional organizations and geopolitical alignments laying claim to authority over the global economy; households, consumers, and workers facing increasingly intolerable levels of inequality: These dramatic conditions seem to cry out for new ways of understanding the purposes, roles, and challenges of central banks and financial governance more generally. Financial Citizenship reveals that the conflicts about who gets to decide how central banks do all these things, and about whether central banks are acting in everyone's interest when they do them, are in large part the product of a culture clash between experts and the various global publics that have a stake in what central banks do.

      Expertscentral bankers, regulators, market insiders, and th

      Trade Review

      Annelise Riles makes a powerful case for this re-engineering of the argument for central-bank independence.

      * Survival *

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