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The paper this interview is based on is here

There is a certain tension between the claims that finance improves allocation and that it
tightens discipline. After all, the economic benefits of finance come precisely from the way in
which it suspends the discipline of the market. Finance allows companies to grow despite having
no profits of their own to reinvest, as vividly illustrated along Sandhill Road and its equivalents
around the world. More generally, it breaks the link between current income and current ex-
penditure. The most disciplined government would be one that paid for all expenditure strictly
out of current receipts; such a government would have no need of finance. This contradiction
is visible in acute form in Europe. The crisis there is said to show that financial markets must
be freer and governments must submit more strictly to their discipline. Yet it is those same
markets' financing of large deficits and "mispricing" of government debt that is understood to
have created the crisis in the first place.
by generic on Thu Nov 9th, 2017 at 10:03:59 AM EST
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Thanks for providing this, although I started reading it with a certain prejudice acquired from having read many similar efforts to describe market failure through the ages or reconcile economic and financial ('pecuniary' is Veblen's magic word) strategies to accumulate wealth without even questioning centuries of capitalist indoctrination (rooted in private property), much less de facto and de jure sanctions of the state that absolutely prune the scale and scope of the market "behavior" of individuals and "corporations".

I'll finish it this evening and leave an historical example of "agency dilemma" that caught my attention again last night after an encounter with a UID extolling the virtue of bitcoin ("store of value") by comparison to gold and fiat but not quite slaves and "miners".

GENOA, 12th - 15th cen. CE "triangle trade" terminal of slaves, precious metals, and finance spanning west Africa to China. Have you never wondered how Europe accumulated gold reserves given its deposits are negligible? I settled on two abridged references.

Genoa, 'La Superba': The Rise and Fall of a Merchant Pirate Superpower

In 1266 the Mongol leaders of the Golden Horde ceded Caffa to Genoese, and Tana (on the Sea of Azov) to both the Genoese and Venetians. ... Unsurprisingly, Caffa was to host one of Europes largest slave markets. Genoa was tapping directly into major trade routes thousands of miles long, and linking them with the rapidly developing European economy. It was the medieval invention of globalisation.

Medieval Italy: An Encyclopedia
Overseas trade, Genoa's economic backbone, relied on three types of contracts: the commenda, the societas, and the sea loan.[...]It neede commercial privileges in Latin Syria and obtained these by aiding the crusades; it also neede treaties with the Byzantines, who still controlled access to the Black Sea.* [...] Early in 1252, Genoa introduced the first reaular gold coinage in the west, narrowly edging out Florence. By then Genoa dominated trade in the Greek islands and rivaled Pisa and Venice in the crusader states, and Egypt remained the heart of the eastern trade.* [...] Genoa's galleys, unlike those of Venice, remained completely private ventures. Because of vast war debts, the popular regime under Guglielmo Boccanegra had to reorganize the commune's finances, which relied heavily on excise taxes, a modest tariff, and borrowing during wartime. ...A precocious market in public securities developed as new laws allowed creditors to sell shares.

(
) Anatolian, Balkan, Chinese gold deposits still among largest reserves today.
(**) actually, trans-continental Muslim trade, well-documented in Arabic literature, to Ghana/Benin for gold bullion and dust, still among largest reserves today.

Diversity is the key to economic and political evolution.
by Cat on Thu Nov 9th, 2017 at 06:21:54 PM EST
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