18 research outputs found

    Deriving a normal country: Italian capitalism and the political economy of financial derivatives

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    The financialisation literature is an invaluable resource to explore the expansion of finance in modern capitalism. However, the debate focuses on the US and the UK extensively, whilst being too general with regard to other contexts. This inattention hinders a proper understanding of financialisation in its di↵erential nature across societies. To rectify such limitation, this thesis advances a theoretically controlled and historically informed study about a striking instance of financial excess outside the Anglo-American scenario: derivatives in Italy. The work argues that scholars are inattentive to the heterogeneous nature of financialisation because they conceptualise the power of finance as entrenched in socio-economic structures. As a result, they underplay the actors who adopt financialised practices di↵erentially. Premised on this critique, the thesis advances an agency-centred approach that analyses power from the perspective of agents. In so doing, it examines the diverse traits of financialisation in relation to the specific power struggles in which actors are involved. Drawing on this method, the work shows that financialisation studies fail to appreciate how key social forces deployed derivatives for political-strategic purposes in the Italian context. During the 1990s, a neoliberal-reformist alliance of pro-market technocrats and centre-left politicians got to power and pushed for Italy to join EMU. This project functioned as an external limit on the domestic political-economic establishment which relied on high public debt, the vast state-owned enterprise and the opaque corporate-governance regime. In brief, citing a slogan widely used in those days, the neoliberal-reformist coalition attempted to make Italy a ‘normal country’ in Europe. Derivatives were crucial in this regard because they helped the Italian government comply with the EMU admission criteria. First, reformists encouraged hedge funds to arbitrage the interest-rate convergence between Italian and German bonds via OTC derivatives markets. Second, they arranged a currency swap that window-dressed the 1997 deficit. The thesis concludes by examining how other actors adopted derivatives to deal with the neoliberal-driven modernisation of Italy. It studies how the Agnelli family used equity swaps to secure ownership over FIAT and how municipalities manipulated budget restrictions through interest rate swaps

    The financialisation of local governments: Evidence from the Italian case

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    The financialisation of local governments: Evidence from the Italian cas

    Derivatives as weapons of mass deception and elite contestation: the case of FIAT

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    Derivatives as weapons of mass deception and elite contestation: the case of FIA

    Derivatives and the financialisation of the Italian state

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    © 2015 Taylor & Francis.The existing literature on financialisation has devoted insufficient attention to how governments wield the market-based practices and technologies of financial innovation to pursue statecraft objectives. Because of this inattention, scholars have missed the opportunity to examine a crucial facet of the financialisation of the state. To remedy this limitation, the present article investigates how and why the Italian government designed derivatives-based strategies during the 1993–9 period. It argues that these tactics gained momentum in the context of the political struggles that developed in Italy beginning in the late 1980s. In particular, the study shows how a neoliberal-reformist alliance came to power and used financial innovation to comply with the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) admission criteria. EMU dynamics enhanced the power position of the neoliberal-reformist coalition vis-à-vis the country's traditional political and business establishment. This work offers insights that go beyond the specificities of the Italian case. It encourages further research on how governments in other countries simultaneously exposed state institutions to financial speculation and gained access to a range of new instruments through which they could manage state affairs in a financialised manner

    Italian municipalities and the politics of financial derivatives: rethinking the Foucauldian perspective

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    © The Author(s) 2015.This study examines the use of interest rate swaps by Italian municipalities during the 2000-2014 period. Through a constructive critique of Foucauldian political economy, it argues that local administrators did not enter the swaps market to perform and depoliticize the disciplinary power of financialized discourses. The evidence suggests many more layers of historical complexity underlie the municipalities' actions than a Foucauldian approach can grasp. Local governments used swaps to circumvent the budget constraints imposed by the European Stability and Growth Pact. In this sense, municipalities acted more for political-strategic than for performative and depoliticized purposes. Rethinking the dimensions of performativity and disciplinary power - through an approach that is more sensitive than Foucauldian analysis to historical agency and asymmetrical power relations - is crucial to address the differential and politically shaped contours of financialization across the globe

    The Role of Workarounds in Benefits Realisation: Evidence from a Field Study in Saudi Arabia

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    Recent studies show that more than half of Saudi Arabian (SA) organisations fail to realise business benefits from their IS investments. This has been largely attributed to the contextual misalignment between information technologies and the needs of developing countries. In the IS literature on benefits realisation, the application of benefits dependency networks (BDN), have been established as being helpful in improving IS projects outcomes. This research investigates current IT development practice in SMEs in Saudi Arabia and reports on some of the challenges that these businesses need to overcome to achieve benefits from their IT investments. Evidence from the literature and a field study suggests that workarounds are widely used when implementing new IT, particularly to facilitate the continuation of embedded cultural practices. The paper argues that integrating the Theory of Workarounds into frameworks for benefits realisation would offer a useful conceptualisation of IT implementation practice to support businesses in developing countries such as Saudi Arabia to improve outcomes when investing in IT

    Statecraft strategies and housing financialization at the periphery: Post-socialist trajectories in Russia and Poland

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    A new literature on housing and financialization has emerged in recent years, but scholars have yet to examine how political actors shape national trajectories of housing financialization. In this article, we address this shortcoming by examining the cases of Russia and Poland in the 1990-2018 period. We argue that in both contexts political elites implemented a radical market-oriented reshaping of housing finance. However, by pursuing distinct statecraft strategies and modes of integrating the domestic economy into global markets, Russian and Polish political elites created two divergent trajectories of housing financialization. Russian political elites pursued patrimonial statecraft strategies and a mode of global economic integration based on raw material exports. The Putin administration channeled revenues from raw material exports into the securitization-based housing finance system and used this infrastructure as an instrument of hegemonic power. In doing so, the Russian government shielded homeowners from exposure to financial risk. In contrast, Polish political elites pursued liberal statecraft strategies and a mode of global economic integration based on foreign capital inflows. Polish political parties therefore enabled foreign banks to dominate the housing finance system and sell foreign currency mortgages, which exposed homeowners to considerable financial risk. In light of these findings we call for further research into the political factors that shape the process of housing financialization, both in the post-socialist space and beyond

    Statecraft strategies and housing financialization at the periphery: Post-socialist trajectories in Russia and Poland

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    A new literature on housing and financialization has emerged in recent years, but scholars have yet to examine how political actors shape national trajectories of housing financialization. In this article, we address this shortcoming by examining the cases of Russia and Poland in the 1990-2018 period. We argue that in both contexts political elites implemented a radical market-oriented reshaping of housing finance. However, by pursuing distinct statecraft strategies and modes of integrating the domestic economy into global markets, Russian and Polish political elites created two divergent trajectories of housing financialization. Russian political elites pursued patrimonial statecraft strategies and a mode of global economic integration based on raw material exports. The Putin administration channeled revenues from raw material exports into the securitization-based housing finance system and used this infrastructure as an instrument of hegemonic power. In doing so, the Russian government shielded homeowners from exposure to financial risk. In contrast, Polish political elites pursued liberal statecraft strategies and a mode of global economic integration based on foreign capital inflows. Polish political parties therefore enabled foreign banks to dominate the housing finance system and sell foreign currency mortgages, which exposed homeowners to considerable financial risk. In light of these findings we call for further research into the political factors that shape the process of housing financialization, both in the post-socialist space and beyond

    Report on trends in the Italian productive system

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    In the last decade the Italian economy has underperformed compared both with the previous decades and with the main European countries. It is widely acknowledged that this evolution reflects unresolved structural problems, which have become more urgent in view of the major changes in the world economy (the new technological paradigm, globalization, European economic integration). The goal of the Report is to make a critical survey of all the empirical analyses on the Italian economy and to derive policy suggestions. The evolution of Italy’s productive system is examined from a long-run perspective, highlighting weaknesses and possible signs of recovery and elaborating on the systemic features that may have negatively affected growth performance directly or indirectly through the above exogenous shocks. The focus, mostly but not exclusively microeconomic, emphasizes the considerable heterogeneity of firms, a crucial element for identifying the factors that affect economic growth.growth, productivity, market structure, firm heterogeneity
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