
This Book Demonstrates Why Widening Inequality Cannot Be Understood Without Examining The Rise Of Big Finance. The Growth Of The Financial Sector Has Dramatically Transformed The American Economy By Redistributing Resources From Workers And Families Into The Hands Of Owners, Executives, And Financial Professionals. The Average American Is Now Divested From A World Driven By The Maximization Of Financial Profit. The Authors Provide Systematic Evidence To Document How The Ascendance Of Finance On Wall Street, Main Street, And Among Households Is A Fundamental Cause Of Economic Inequality. They Argue That Finance Has Reshaped The Economy In Three Important Ways. First, The Financial Sector Extracts Resources From The Economy At Large Without Providing Economic Benefits To Those Outside The Financial Services Industry. Second, Firms In Other Economic Sectors Have Become Increasingly Involved In Lending And Investing, Which Weakens The Demand For Labor And The Bargaining Power Of Workers. And Third, The Escalating Consumption Of Financial Products By Households Shifts Risks And Uncertainties Once Shouldered By Unions, Corporations, And Governments Onto Families. A Clear, Comprehensive, And Convincing Account Of The Forces Driving Economic Inequality In America, This Book Warns Us That The Most Damaging Consequence Of The Expanding Financial System Is Not Simply Recurrent Financial Crises But A Widening Social Divide Between The Have And Have-nots.
This book investigates how the expansion of the financial sector serves as a primary driver of economic inequality in the United States. Authors Ken-hou Lin and Megan Tobias Neely utilize sociological and economic data to argue that the financialization of the American economy has systematically redistributed resources away from workers and families. They present a framework that links the rise of Wall Street influence to the erosion of labor power and the increased financial risk burden placed upon individual households.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the sociological study of financialization and its impact on social stratification. Readers frequently note the clarity of the authors' arguments, which make complex economic shifts accessible to those outside of the finance industry.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190638346
ISBN-13:
9780190638344
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