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Author:
Monnet, Eric, 1983- author.
Title:
Balance of power : central banks and the fate of democracies / aEric Monnet ; translated from the French by Steven Rendall.
Publisher:
The University of Chicago Press,
Copyright Date:
2024
Description:
pages cm
Subject:
Banks and banking, Central--Political aspects.
Welfare state.
Monetary policy.
Other Authors:
Rendall, Steven, translator.
Other Titles:
Banque-providence. English (Rendall)
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Introduction: Central banks as protectors -- Central banks, money, and the welfare state -- Money from nowhere -- More problems: buying debt, lending abroad, and going digital -- Central banks everywhere -- Democratizing the central banks -- Afterword: The central bank belongs to democracy.
Summary:
"Reconsidering the limits-past, present, future-of the financial institutions that stand between us and the abyss. Two financial crises in two decades have expanded and diversified the roles of central banks in the twenty-first century. With the 2008 crash, they became the lenders of last resort in monetary policy; with Covid-19, they became underwriters of the public welfare. Both powers are expansive, unchecked, and inherently political. Is this democracy? In Balance of Power, economist and historian aEric Monnet traces the rise of the central banks-from their public-private origins to their current portfolio, which spans everything from interest rates to international relations-to make an urgent and erudite argument: the central banks are no longer independent, if they ever were. And our ability to subject them to democratic rule will go a long way in wielding their expansive powers effectively in societies that face multiple crises at once. Eschewing the traditional storytelling around the birth of central banks and their operational independence, Monnet shows how the power of central banks flows from their origins as a part of the welfare state: they were the financial apparatus used to stabilize societies after World War II, and they have never abdicated that role since. Today it can be seen in the central banks' role as insurance providers-the backstop institution of bailouts, stimuli, and rescue plans. As new challenges emerge, including the boom of digital currencies and the simmering crisis of climate change, central banks will necessarily have to break the glass on longstanding taboos of monetary policy. With this creeping expansion well underway, Monnet offers a trenchant, deeply erudite case for what a democratic central bank can look like"-- Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
0226834131
9780226834139
LCCN:
2023036228
Locations:
GBPF771 -- Ankeny Kirkendall Public Library (Ankeny)
UQAX771 -- Des Moines Area Community College Library - Ankeny (Carroll)
TYPH572 -- Cedar Rapids Public Library (Cedar Rapids)

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