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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, May 31, 2019
Sensation Of Financialization
Financialization involves the growth and transformation of finance such that with its hugely expanded size, scope and concentration, finance now overshadows, dominates and destabilizes the productive economy.
by Jomo Kwame Sundaram and Michael Lim Mah Hui-2019-05-30
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Over recent decades, the scope, size, concentration, power and even the
purpose and role of finance have changed so significantly that a new
term, financialization, was coined to name this phenomenon.
Financialization refers to a process that has not only transformed
finance itself, but also, the real economy and society. The
transformation goes beyond the quantitative to involve qualitative
change as finance becomes dominant, instead of serving the needs of the
real economy.
Financialization involves the growth and transformation of finance such
that with its hugely expanded size, scope and concentration, finance now
overshadows, dominates and destabilizes the productive economy.
The role and purpose of finance has been qualitatively transformed.
Finance used to profit from serving production and trade. Traditionally,
financing production involved providing funds for manufacturers to
finance production, and for traders to buy and sell.
Financialization, on the other hand, turns every imaginable product or
service into financial commodities or services to be traded, often for
speculation. Instead of seeking profits by financing the productive
economy and trade, finance is now more focused on extracting rents from
the economy.
Finance is hegemonic, dominating all of society without appearing to do
so, transforming more and more things into financial products and
services to be traded and sold. But financialization could not have
happened on its own.
Its nature and pace have been enabled and shaped by ideological, legal,
institutional and deliberate policy and regulatory changes. Regulatory
authorities, both national and international, can barely keep up with
its transformative consequences.
Size matters
One aspect of financialization refers to the size of finance relative to
the whole economy, with the financial sector growing faster and
securing more profit than other sectors. The simplest and most popular
measure of finance uses national income accounts for ‘finance, insurance
and real estate' (FIRE).
In the US, finance's share of GDP grew from 14% to 21% between 1960 and
2017, while manufacturing's fell from 27% to 11%, and trade's declined
from 17% to 12%. The financial sector is almost twice as large as both
trade and manufacturing sectors.
The growth of shadow banking, referring to activities similar to
traditional banking undertaken by non-bank financial institutions that
are not regulated as banks, is a growing and significant source of
credit and accounts for much of the growth of finance.
Such institutions include hedge funds, private equity funds, mortgage
lenders, money market funds and insurance companies. These financial
institutions, including traditional banks, have used securitization,
‘off-balance sheet' derivative positions and leverage to create, manage
and trade securities and derivatives, ballooning its business volume.
With heightened concerns about growing financial fragility, more
sophisticated measures have been introduced to estimate ‘shadow
banking'. Most country-level measures show shadow banking increasing
rapidly before, and more worryingly, after the 2008-2009 global
financial crisis!
At the same time, finance has also secured the most gains in the US,
taking advantage of the sector's ability to leverage more than
non-financial corporations, engaging in financial innovations and
trading complex and opaque products netting super profits.
During 1960-2017, finance almost doubled its profits, from 17% to 30% of
total domestic corporate profits, while manufacturing's share shrank by
almost two thirds from 49% to 17%.
Jim Reid of Deutsche Bank estimated that that the US financial sector
made around US$1.2 trillion (US$1,200 billion) in ‘excess profits',
relative to the previous mean, in the decade before the 2008 global
financial crisis.
Greater concentration
There are contrasting views of whether bank concentration leads to
greater or less financial stability. But size certainly does not
guarantee either good banking practices or financial stability.
In fact, the global financial crisis suggests that the "too big to fail"
syndrome encouraged moral hazard. Big banks take on excessive risk as
they believe they have a safety net -- governments will bail them out to
prevent a financial system collapse.
Over the years, US banking has become more concentrated. This
accelerated with the abolition of the Glass-Steagall Act and its
replacement with the Graham-Leah-Bliley Act in 1999 which saw the
creation of universal bank behemoths combining commercial and investment
banking activities.
The top five banks in 1990 held less than 10% of total bank assets; by
2007, they had 44%. Seven years after the 2008-2009 Global Financial
Crisis, the US banking industry is just as concentrated, with the top
five banks – JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citibank and
US Bancorp – holding US$7 trillion, or 44% of total bank assets.
Meanwhile, asset management is even more concentrated than banking.
Together, the ‘Big Three' – Blackrock, Vanguard and State Street – are
the largest shareholders in four-fifths of listed US corporations,
managing nearly US$11 trillion, thrice the worth of global hedge funds.
Such asset management relies on banks for leveraged access to financial
markets.
Undoubtedly, many regulators have replaced previously weak regulation,
which failed to check spreading systemic risk before the 2008-2009
global financial crisis, with new rules. But these do not seem to have
effectively checked more recent abusive practices.
“Money is what powers economy” – as professor Anis H. Bajrektarevic
writes – “but our blind faith in (constructed) tomorrows and its alleged
certainty is what empowers money.”Recent technological, ideological,
institutional and political changes have drastically transformed
finance, enabling it to penetrate and dominate all spheres of life such
that financialization is the new avatar.
Jomo Kwame Sundaram, a former economics professor, was United Nations
Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development, and received the
Wassily Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought.
Dr Michael LIM Mah Hui has been a university professor and banker, in the private sector and with the Asian Development Bank.