Covering the private parts: the (re-)nationalisation of housing finance |
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Authors: | Herman Mark Schwartz |
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Institution: | 1. Politics Department, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USAschwartz@virginia.edu |
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Abstract: | AbstractIs state power or control over financial markets really withering? Most narratives/analyses of financialisation see a growing penetration of private capital into everyday life that runs parallel to the increasing power of private financial capital over state policy. Yet housing finance – mortgages – sits at the centre of banking, and banking sits at the centre of the financial system. Large-scale mortgage markets only function where the state wraps around the banking system to remove maturity risks and to limit excessive credit creation. Partial deregulation in the 1990s and 2000s created a crisis that states resolved by re-nationalising much of mortgage finance. This renewed and overwhelming state presence suggests that financialisation is a state-driven story, and that private financial power, stability and instruments require state support above and beyond contract enforcement and prudential regulation. |
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Keywords: | Financialisation mortgages banking regulation |
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