Le consensus de Paris: la France et les regles de la finance mondiale
In: Critique internationale: revue comparative de sciences sociales, Heft 3, S. 87-115
Abstract
This article is about the institutional foundations of the globalization of finance. These institutional foundations are both informal & formal. Until the 1980s the formal rules of the international financial architecture -- most consequentially in the European Union (EU), Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD), & International Monetary Fund (IMF) -- condoned & privileged capital controls. The EU & OECD adopted new rules obliging members to liberalize capital in the late 1980s. During the middle of the 1990s the IMF debated new rules in favor of capital freedom, but the proposal was defeated. Three policy makers in the EU, OECD, & IMF played decisive roles in formulating these new rules in favor of capital freedom: respectively, Jacques Delors, Henri Chavranski, & Michel Camdessus -- all three French. This is a paradox because the French had done more than any other country to obstruct the creation of new rules in favor of capital mobility for more than three decades. In this article I offer three narratives of the institutional foundations of capital freedom that constitute this French paradox. Then I offer an explanation for the French paradox based on three ideas: the difference between French rule-based globalization & U.S. ad hoc globalization; the organization building imperatives of each episode for the French, particularly in the EU; & the embrace of the market by the French Left in order to alleviate the undesirable distributional consequences of circumvented financial regulation. Adapted from the source document.
Themen
Sprachen
Französisch
Verlag
Presses de Sciences Po, Paris France
ISSN: 1149-9818, 1290-7839
Problem melden