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Finance, Servant or Deceiver?

Summary - Press Clipping

Finance: Servant or Deceiver?

Financialisation at the Crossroad

Prof. Paul H. Dembinski, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, 179 pages

 

(French edition - Finance servante ou finance trompeuse?,Desclée de Brouwer, Paris, 2008)


The work of the Observatoire de la Finance over the past ten years has shown that the continuing spread of financial logic through society is the result of a converging set of factors: the development of technology and, more generally, of wealth-creating capacity, a growing dread of risk and the unforeseen as living standards increase, finance's theoretically based claim to guarantee the West a peaceful future, the challenges and aspirations of countries in the South with regard to economic and social development, and so on.

In the course of the Observatoire's research it has become clear that the psychological, philosophical and moral dimensions of finance are as important to a proper understanding of it as are its economic, technical and institutional aspects. It is these avenues that the Observatoire has explored over the past decade.

The result today is an epistemologically coherent conceptual framework that has been used to help draw up a systemic diagnosis. The diagnosis, which is the subject of this book, reveals that behind the conspicuous expansion of finance a systemic transformation, referred to here as 'financialization', is in fact taking place.

To receive the book :
office@obsfin.ch

Summary

INTRODUCTION
Background
Good timing
Theoretical background
How financialization is changing society
Structure of the report

PART I: THE FINANCIAL ICEBERG

Chapter 1.1 THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF FINANCE
The euphoric years
Money: from servant to master
ICT euphoria
The break-up of money

Chapter 1.2 PLAYERS AND INSTITUTIONS
Markets as trust-building mechanisms
Mega-players
Custodians of the market temple
Public deficits and how they are financed

Chapter 1.3 THE FINANCIAL WORLD VIEW
The efficiency ethos
Risk and return: a neat paradigm
Risk – fear of risk – a risk-free future
From interest to greed: unbridled passion

PART II: A NEW PATTERN

Chapter 2.1 FINANCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS
Financial relationships
From financial relationships to financial transactions
Financial transactions

Chapter 2.2 THE SPREAD OF TRANSACTIONS
The institutional process
Financial markets as sounding boards
Finance as intermediary
Relationships and transactions: statistical orders of magnitude
Finance and the rest of the economy

Chapter 2.3 VERY LARGE CORPORATIONS: THE VEHICLES OF FINANCIALIZATION
Very Large Corporations (VLCs)
A global marketing economy
Enterprises' value: new forms of capital
Shareholder value: the mantra of the new foremen
ROE rules
Procedures as a vehicle for efficiency

Chapter 2.4 FINANCIALIZATION OF THE ECONOMIC FABRIC
VLCs' subcontractors
SMEs: private equity on the prowl

Chapter 2.5 TYING CUSTOMERS TO BUSINESSES
Planned obsolescence
'Personalized' customer relations
Dissolving products into services
The alienation of the anaesthetized consumer

Chapter 2.6 OTHER ASPECTS OF FINANCIALIZATION
The age of anticipation: banks and their customers
Humanity in the grip of financialization
Finance: a metaphysical response

Chapter 2.7 IMPLICATIONS OF THE NEW PATTERN

PART III : FINANCE – WHAT KIND OF SOCIETY DO WE WANT?

Chapter 3.1 LIMITS INHERENT IN THE PROCESS ITSELF
The spectre of sterility
Complexity
Concentration of economic power

Chapter 3.2 LIMITS INHERENT IN HUMAN NATURE
Transactions: beyond conflicts of interest
Ethical alienation
A sense of helplessness

Chapter 3.3 WHAT IS TO BE DONE?
Challenge financial ethics
Encourage long-term relationships
Change the system of remuneration
Revisit financial process

 

Press clipping...

«A world where transactions rule»
by John Plender, published in Financial Times, March 9, 2009

«Finance: Servant or Deceiver?»
by Warwick Lightfood, published in Financial World, March 2009

«Finance et éthique: incompatibles ou complémentaires?»
interivew with Paul H. Dembinski, published in l'entreprise & l'homme, January-March 2009

«La finance moderne doit réapprendre à poser la frontière entre le risque et l'incertitude»
by Paul H. Dembinski, published on lapartderisque.fr, October 6, 2008

«Comprendre la crise financière»
by Roger Schindelholz, published in Le Quotidien Jurassien, October 6, 2008

«La finance est une maîtresse trompeuse»
interview with Paul H. Dembinski, published in La Liberté, October 1, 2008

«Finance servante ou finance trompeuse?»
published in Chrétiens dans la Cité, October 2008

«Ein Finanzsystem für das Gemeinwohl»
by Paul H. Dembinski, published in Neue Luzerner Zeitung, September 27, 2008

«Finanza in crisi, colpa di Nixon»
by Beda Romano, published in Il Sole 24 Ore, August 10, 2008

«Finance servante ou finance trompeuse?»
published in Revue Banque, June 2008

«Finance servante ou finance trompeuse?»
by Marie-Claude Jacquot, published in Alternatives Economiques, June 2008

«Le vrai visage de la finance»
published in Banque et Finance, May-June 2008

«Faut-il moraliser la finance?»
interview with Paul H. Dembinski
by Fabien Franco, published in Kaële Magazine, May 2008

«Pour une finance au service du bien commun»
by Paul H. Dembinski, published in Agefi Hebdo, May 7-14, 2008

«La critique radicale»
published in Private Banking, May 2008

«Pour une finance au service du bien commun»
interview with Paul H. Dembinski
by Alain Dupraz, published in Echo Magazine, April 17, 2008

«Critique de la finance comme fossoyeur des relations humaines»
interview with Paul H. Dembinski
by Jean-Claude Péclet, published in Le Temps, April 7, 2008

«Au fond, qu’est-ce que la financiarisation
by Jan Marejko, published in l'agefi, April 4-6, 2008

«Finance mondiale: Apocalypse now?»
interview with Paul H. Dembinski
by Pierre-François Besson, published on swissinfo.ch, March 31, 2008

«Pour une finance au service du bien commun»
by Paul H. Dembinski, published in Le Temps, March 26, 2008

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