The Fall and Rise of American Finance: from J.P. Morgan to Blackrock
By (Author) Scott Aquanno
By (author) Stephen Maher
Verso Books
Verso Books
30th April 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of specific companies / corporate history
Centrist democratic ideologies
336.73
Paperback
272
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 18mm
306g
This book tells the story of the fall and rise of financial power in American capitalism, from the collapse of the J.P. Morgan's vast empire to the rise of finance behemoth BlackRock. It traces the making and remaking of the American ruling class as the postwar "Golden Age" of industrial hegemony gave way to the powerful revival of finance in the neoliberal period. Following the 2008 crisis, this remaking culminated in the reorganization of our financial system around the unprecedented economic power of the "Big Three" asset management firms. Maher and Aquanno elucidate the transformations of ruling class power across these periods, highlighting how transitions from one phase to another were shaped by profound crises and marked by the restructuring of corporations and the state. Contrary to what has become the common sense view, advanced by figures from Hillary Clinton to Bernie Sanders, Maher and Aquanno insist that financialization did not imply the decline of capitalism, the hollowing out of the "real" economy, or the retreat of the state. Rather, it served to intensify competitive discipline to maximize efficiency, profits, and the exploitation of labor - all with the support of an increasingly authoritarian state.
Stephen Maher is Associate Editor of the Socialist Register and author of Corporate Capitalism and the Integral State: General Electric and a Century of American Power (Palgrave, 2022). He is currently a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Ontario Tech University in Oshawa, Canada. Scott M. Aquanno is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Ontario Tech University, and a Visiting Associate at the Global Labour Research Centre at York University. He is the author of Crisis of Risk: Subprime Debt and US Financial Power from 1944 to Present (Edward Elgar, 2021).