Description
Book SynopsisThis book is a dialogue between sociologists and heterodox economists on the nature of capitalist money and on understanding financial crises arising from money's dual purposes and tensions.
Table of ContentsPreface; R. Swedeberg 1. Introduction to Positive Trespassing'; J. F. Pixley and G. C. Harcourt 2. Requirements of a Philosophy of Money and Finance; J. Smithin 3. Ingham and Keynes on the Nature of Money; M. Hayes 4. Money: Instrument of Exchange or Social Institution of Value? A. Orlean and C. Goodhart 5. A New Meme for Money, R. Wray 6. Monetary Surrogates and Money's Dual Nature; D. Woodruff 7. Reforming Money to Exit the Crisis: Examples of Non-capitalist Monetary Systems in Theory and Practice; L. Fantacci 8. The Current Banking Crisis in the UK: an Evolutionary View; V. Chick 9. Money and the State; M. Sawyer 10. The Real (Social) Experience of Monetary Policy; S. Dow 11. Economic Policies of the New Consensus Macroeconomics: A Critical Appraisal; P. Arestis 12. A Socio-economic Systems Model of the 2007+ Global Financial Crisis; T.R. Burns, A. Martinelli and P. Deville 13. Credit Money, Fiat Money and Currency Pyramids: Critical Reflections on the Financial Crisis and Sovereign Debt, B. Jessop 14. Geoffrey Ingham's Theory, Money's Conflicts and Social Change; J. Pixley 15. Reflections on the Two Disciplines' Mutual Work; G. Ingham