Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The End of Finance: The Theory of Capital Market Inflation, Financial Derivatives, and Pension Fund Capitalism

Toporowski, Jan

Authors

Jan Toporowski



Abstract

This volume develops an original critique of the belief that the present era of finance, where finance markets dominate contemporary capitalist economies, represents the best possible way of organising economic affairs. In fact, it is argued, the ensuing economic instability and inefficiency create the preconditions for the end of the dominance of finance. The End of Finance develops a theory of capital market inflation rooted in the work of Veblen, Kalecki, Keynes and Minsky, demonstrating how it disinclines productive activity on the part of firms, provides only short-term conditions that are propitious for privatisation and distorts monetary policy in the long-term. The author examines the role of pension fund schemes and financial derivatives in transmitting capital market inflation and provides a nuanced analysis of the contradictory role they play in the financial system. Capital market inflation is also examined in its historical context and compared with past inflations, in particular the South Sea and Mississippi Bubbles, which spawned the first financial derivatives, and the first privatisations. This broad historical vision allows us to see these forms of inflation as temporary and provisional in character.

Citation

Toporowski, J. (2000). The End of Finance: The Theory of Capital Market Inflation, Financial Derivatives, and Pension Fund Capitalism. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203014097

Book Type Authored Book
Publication Date Jan 1, 2000
Deposit Date Sep 13, 2015
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Series Title Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy
Series Number 25
ISBN 9780415208819
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203014097


Downloadable Citations