In recent years, we've been rocked by a series of economic jolts, and
all of them seemed to revolve around finance. And the most recent, the
American mortgage meltdown, has sent shock waves around the world.
Managed by the Markets
offers an illuminating account of how finance has replaced
manufacturing at the center of the American economy over the past three
decades, explaining how the new finance-centered system works, how we
got here, and what challenges lay ahead.
Since the early 1980s, Gerald F. Davis shows, finance and financial
considerations have increasingly taken center stage, dramatically
reshaping American society. Corporations now have an overriding focus
on creating shareholder value, while their personnel practices no
longer provide secure employment, economic mobility, health insurance,
or retirement benefits. Instead, employees must become shareholding
free-agents, left to their own fate. Banking has shifted from the
traditional role of taking in deposits and making loans to the
widespread use of "securitization," turning loans (such as mortgages or
corporate debt) into bonds owned by institutional investors. The
financial services industry is both more concentrated among large banks
and mutual funds, yet more spread out among under-regulated specialists
such as mortgage finance companies and hedge funds. And states
increasingly act as "vendors" in a global marketplace of law, emulating
firms such as Nike, hiring contractors to do much of the work of
government.
As a result, individuals and households find their
welfare tied to the stock market and the mortgage market as never
before. And the turbulence of recent years starkly underscores the
dangers of depending too much on financial markets. Written in the
spirit of C. Wright Mills' penetrating
The Power Elite
and
White Collar
, this brilliant study provides an invaluable map of the finance-driven American society.