Abstract

Despite the hubris that has attended the global ambitions of American financiers for over a century, the actual rise to world dominance of American finance was far from smooth or inevitable. The goal of 'building the world's capital for all time to come' in New York, already articulated in the late nineteenth century, looked set to be realized by the end of the First World War. Yet it was only a decade later that the Wall Street crash triggered the Great Depression and the breakdown of the international financial order. And while New York took its place as the world's principal financial centre at the end of the Second World War, this seemed much less important when the new Bretton Woods order had supposedly marginalized finance relative to production and trade. As the story of twentieth-century capitalism is usually told today, only the neoliberal 'revolution' of the 1980s and 1990s finally unleashed the forces that made Wall Street the central location of the world economy. But far from this marking the end of history, the scandal that enveloped Richard Grasso in 2003 over his $150 million salary not only epitomized the venality of New York as the capital of global finance, but it also appeared to symbolize its fragility. And Hank Paulson's bold statement of confidence in New York as the financial capital of the world — expressed in the midst of the global credit crisis that had its roots in the collapse of the US domestic subprimemortgagemarket (with Paulson's ownWall Street firm Goldman Sachs having played a large role in making that market) — could be taken as yet another example of whistling in the dark (Stein 2007).KeywordsForeign Direct InvestmentMonetary PolicyFinancial MarketFinancial InstitutionFederal ReserveThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

Keywords

Great DepressionCapitalismEconomic historyFinancial crisisWorld War IIHistoryPolitical sciencePolitical economyEconomicsPoliticsLawKeynesian economics

Related Publications

Alliance Capitalism

Business practices in Japan inspire fierce and even acrimonious debate, especially when they are compared to American practices. This book attempts to explain the remarkable eco...

1992 923 citations

Publication Info

Year
2009
Type
book-chapter
Pages
17-47
Citations
83
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Altmetric

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

83
OpenAlex

Cite This

Leo Panitch, Sam Gindin (2009). Finance and American Empire. Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks , 17-47. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230227675_2

Identifiers

DOI
10.1057/9780230227675_2