TY - JOUR
T1 - The Hierarchies of Global Finance
T2 - An Anti-Disciplinary Research Agenda
AU - Kvangraven, Ingrid Harvold
AU - Dyveke Styve, Maria
N1 - Funding Information:
This article has benefited greatly from feedback from many colleagues and friends. Since the beginning of the Price of Wealth project back in 2019, which was funded by the Wenner-Gren Foundation, we have received sustained and constructive feedback from participants of the project. We are indebted to Rick McGahey, Teresa Ghilarducci, and Gustav Pebbles for inviting us to be a part of this project and for engaging very constructively and generously with our ideas and various versions of the article from the beginning to the end. Danilyn Rutherford, Donna Auston and Kathryn Derfler from the Wenner-Gren foundation provided academic, logistical and moral support throughout. We are also grateful to our friend Paul Gilbert with whom we had early discussions about the nature and potential of the field of anthropology as a way of enriching economic analysis, but also the drawbacks of anthropology itself and the need to move beyond disciplines. All the workshop participants provided incredibly useful feedback on the article, with a special thanks to Carly Schuster and Isabelle Guérin for giving particularly detailed comments. Last but not least, thanks to the editor and anonymous reviewers of the Review of Political Economy, who provided excellent feedback and helped us polish the article for publication. All errors remain our own.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - This article critically assesses the economics discipline’s capacity to capture the structural features and political economy implications of contemporary financial processes in the global South, with a particular focus on South Africa. Delving into the complexities of financial processes in South Africa, the article proposes an alternative, anti-disciplinary framework for understanding drivers and impacts of financial processes. We show how such an approach cannot simply be about adding social or political perspectives to mainstream economics, but rather about interrogating how we think about economic systems themselves, drawing on a variety of theoretical and disciplinary insights. This is about taking an open and holistic approach that centers history, power, structures, and social relations. With an issue such as finance, critical political economy approaches from a variety of disciplines allow us to see that finance cannot be separated from the wider economy or from the social relations it forms part of today and historically. This becomes particularly clear when considering how racial, gender and class relations both impact and are impacted by financial processes in South Africa. We conclude with recommendations for studies of changing financial processes globally and in the global South.
AB - This article critically assesses the economics discipline’s capacity to capture the structural features and political economy implications of contemporary financial processes in the global South, with a particular focus on South Africa. Delving into the complexities of financial processes in South Africa, the article proposes an alternative, anti-disciplinary framework for understanding drivers and impacts of financial processes. We show how such an approach cannot simply be about adding social or political perspectives to mainstream economics, but rather about interrogating how we think about economic systems themselves, drawing on a variety of theoretical and disciplinary insights. This is about taking an open and holistic approach that centers history, power, structures, and social relations. With an issue such as finance, critical political economy approaches from a variety of disciplines allow us to see that finance cannot be separated from the wider economy or from the social relations it forms part of today and historically. This becomes particularly clear when considering how racial, gender and class relations both impact and are impacted by financial processes in South Africa. We conclude with recommendations for studies of changing financial processes globally and in the global South.
KW - anti-disciplinarity
KW - Global finance
KW - global South
KW - hierarchy
KW - imperialism
KW - South Africa
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85167980142&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09538259.2023.2242209
DO - 10.1080/09538259.2023.2242209
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85167980142
SN - 0953-8259
JO - Review of Political Economy
JF - Review of Political Economy
ER -