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Journal ArticleDOI

Central bankers in the contemporary global field of power: a ‘social space’ approach

TLDR
In the context of the financialization of the global economy, and the importance of financial elites (see Savage and Williams in this volume) the role of central banks has become particularly important.
Abstract
In the context of the financialization of the global economy, and the importance of financial elites (see Savage and Williams in this volume) the role of central banks has become particularly important. The financial crisis of August– September 2007, (the ‘sub-prime mortgage crisis’) has given a new illustration of the growing functional importance of these central banks, which are in charge of monetary and financial stability through their particular daily interventions on the markets. As ‘lenders of last resort’ in case of declining confidence between banks or financial actors and, more generally, ‘custodians of monetary stability’ as they are often described, central bankers determine the general level of confidence in the set of monetary and financial instruments which have developed in recent years, and contribute highly to the production of macroeconomic decisions, and financial dynamics. Behind the opaque walls of central banks, well known to be very secretive institutions, particular social agents appear to be a new economic and political elite. Their role, action and beliefs have become determinant for the reproduction of the economic and social order as a whole. This specific ‘financial’ elite is related to the state bureaucracy (from which it frequently emanates), to the political field and to the dominant actors of the financial markets. In Europe, the creation of the European Central Bank (ECB) has objectified this process by putting the so-called ‘independent’ governing council of the ECB at the centre of monetary policy but also of macroeconomic policy in general. In the very recent period, European central bankers have been put under political pressure by French politicians, condemning the high level of interest rates and above all the over-evaluation of the Euro, resulting from the specific actions of the ECB. In this situation, knowledge of the social trajectories which lead to the position of central banker in different parts of the world is a first step to understanding the social reality behind the emergence of these new global elites. It will help for example to determine the degree of homogeneity of this group and its internal structures; this knowledge will also give an understanding of the social ‘embeddedness’ of monetary and macroeconomic decisions, otherwise seen as structural macro-conditions without any social content. In this sense, the sociology of central bankers is a specific contribution to economic sociol-

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Breaking the ‘class’ ceiling? Social mobility into Britain's elite occupations

TL;DR: The authors found that even when the upwardly mobile are successful in entering elite occupations, they invariably fail to accumulate the same economic, cultural and social capital as those from privileged backgrounds, and also found that the mobile tend to have considerably lower incomes.
MonographDOI

Charting Transnational Fields : Methodology for a Political Sociology of Knowledge

TL;DR: A field-analytical methodology for research knowledge-based sociopolitical processes of transnationalization is proposed in this paper. But the methodology is not suitable for the analysis of complex social relationships in and beyond the nation-state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic experts: a discursive political economy of economics

TL;DR: In this article, a combination of discourse analytical tools from post-structuralism and a theory of symbolic power derived from Bourdieu's work is used to explore how economists occupy a powerful, hegemonic position in the global political economy.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Symbolic Violence to Economic Violence: The Globalizing of the Scottish Banking Elite

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the movement of the Scottish banking elite from the traditional to the global and modernized and demonstrate how members of an elite field can operate in the field of power within their own organization and at the same time within a transorganizational field of peer competitors, thus illustrating how a specific national elite has been affected by neoliberal globalization and its crisis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Structure of the Upper Class: A Social Space Approach

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the internal divisions within the "upper class" of Norway, defined as comprising different types of property owners, top executives and business managers, based on Bourdieu's ''upper class'' theory.
References
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Book

Principles of Economic Sociology

TL;DR: The Classics in Economic Sociology 1 Chapter II. The Cat's Dilemma and Other Questions for Economic Sociologists 283 References 305 Index 357 as mentioned in this paper, Table 5.1.
Book

Geometric Data Analysis: From Correspondence Analysis to Structured Data Analysis

TL;DR: This book discusses Geometric Data Analysis, a branch of Mathematical Bases, and its applications in Multivariate Statistics and Inductive Analysis, and some of the techniques used in this area have been described in detail in this book.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Quiet Revolution: Central Banking Goes Modern

TL;DR: Although little noticed, the face of central banking has changed significantly over the past ten to fifteen years, says the author of this enlightening book Alan S Blinder, a former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve System and member of President Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers, shows that the changes, though quiet, have been sufficiently profound to constitute a revolution in central banking.
Journal ArticleDOI

La production de l'idéologie dominante

TL;DR: Ouvrage de sociologie, publie initialement dans la revue "Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales" (1976) n° 7 as mentioned in this paper