Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality

In this article, I study the impact of financialization on the rise in inequality in 18 OECD countries from 1970 to 2011 and measure the respective roles of various forms of financialization: the growth of the financial sector; the growth of one of its subcomponents, financial markets; the financial...

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Main Author: Olivier Godechot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2016-06-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-22-495/
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spelling doaj-1637a55587384e3b811a2982d36f5eaa2020-11-24T23:46:40ZengSociety for Sociological ScienceSociological Science2330-66962330-66962016-06-0132249551910.15195/v3.a223656Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global InequalityOlivier Godechot0 Sciences Po / MaxPo and OSC-CNRS In this article, I study the impact of financialization on the rise in inequality in 18 OECD countries from 1970 to 2011 and measure the respective roles of various forms of financialization: the growth of the financial sector; the growth of one of its subcomponents, financial markets; the financialization of non-financial firms; and the financialization of households. I test these impacts using cross-country panel regressions in OECD countries. I show first that the share of the finance sector within the GDP is a substantial driver of world inequality, explaining between 20 and 40 percent of its increase from 1980 to 2007. When I decompose this financial sector effect, I find that this evolution was mainly driven by the increase in the volume of stocks traded in national stock exchanges and by the volume of shares held as assets in banks’ balance sheets. By contrast, the financialization of non-financial firms and of households does not play a substantial role. Based on this inequality test, I therefore interpret financialization as being mainly a phenomenon of marketization, redefined as the growing amount of social energy devoted to the trade of financial instruments on financial markets.https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-22-495/FinanceFinancializationIncomeInequalityMarketizationTop 1 Percent
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olivier Godechot
spellingShingle Olivier Godechot
Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality
Sociological Science
Finance
Financialization
Income
Inequality
Marketization
Top 1 Percent
author_facet Olivier Godechot
author_sort Olivier Godechot
title Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality
title_short Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality
title_full Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality
title_fullStr Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality
title_full_unstemmed Financialization Is Marketization! A Study of the Respective Impacts of Various Dimensions of Financialization on the Increase in Global Inequality
title_sort financialization is marketization! a study of the respective impacts of various dimensions of financialization on the increase in global inequality
publisher Society for Sociological Science
series Sociological Science
issn 2330-6696
2330-6696
publishDate 2016-06-01
description In this article, I study the impact of financialization on the rise in inequality in 18 OECD countries from 1970 to 2011 and measure the respective roles of various forms of financialization: the growth of the financial sector; the growth of one of its subcomponents, financial markets; the financialization of non-financial firms; and the financialization of households. I test these impacts using cross-country panel regressions in OECD countries. I show first that the share of the finance sector within the GDP is a substantial driver of world inequality, explaining between 20 and 40 percent of its increase from 1980 to 2007. When I decompose this financial sector effect, I find that this evolution was mainly driven by the increase in the volume of stocks traded in national stock exchanges and by the volume of shares held as assets in banks’ balance sheets. By contrast, the financialization of non-financial firms and of households does not play a substantial role. Based on this inequality test, I therefore interpret financialization as being mainly a phenomenon of marketization, redefined as the growing amount of social energy devoted to the trade of financial instruments on financial markets.
topic Finance
Financialization
Income
Inequality
Marketization
Top 1 Percent
url https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-22-495/
work_keys_str_mv AT oliviergodechot financializationismarketizationastudyoftherespectiveimpactsofvariousdimensionsoffinancializationontheincreaseinglobalinequality
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