2013
DOI: 10.1017/s1537592712003593
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The Political Economy of Global Finance: A Network Model

Abstract: Although the subprime crisis regenerated interest in and stimulated debate about how to study the politics of global finance, it has not sparked the development of new approaches to International Political Economy (IPE), which remains firmly rooted in actor-centered models. We develop an alternative network-based approach that shifts the analytical focus to the relations between actors. We first depict the contemporary global financial system as a network, with a particular focus on its hierarchical structure.… Show more

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Cited by 164 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…23. See Oatley 2011;Oatley et al 2013;Drezner and McNamara 2013;and Cohen 2008. between individual units rather than inside domestic arenas." 24 The most important feature of this conception is that the outcome of interest for one unit is interdependent with the outcomes for other units.…”
Section: Theoretical Relationships and Empirical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…23. See Oatley 2011;Oatley et al 2013;Drezner and McNamara 2013;and Cohen 2008. between individual units rather than inside domestic arenas." 24 The most important feature of this conception is that the outcome of interest for one unit is interdependent with the outcomes for other units.…”
Section: Theoretical Relationships and Empirical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Increasingly decoupled from the surface layer of institutionalized governance, global patterns of capital flows, currency usage, and networks of financial relations are in flux and tracing these changes is equally important for assessing the transformation of the global financial order (Armijo et al., ). Recent research has highlighted that US structural power in global capital markets is largely intact and still counterbalancing the rise of the South (Wade , p. 32, Oatley et al., , p. 148). Yet, we argue that greater financial independence, the increased integration of emerging powers' financial systems, a greater global presence of their multinational corporations (MNCs) and the increasing weight of their banks and other financial entities as financial ‘power brokers' (Subacchi, , p. 493) has the potential to challenge the existing ‘order’ from underneath.…”
Section: Pathways Of Change In the Global Financial Ordermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oatley et al analyzed the political economy of global financial network using a network model (Oatley et al 2013), and Caldarelli et al also employed this formalism and statistical mechanics for reconstructing a financial network even from partial sets of information (Caldarelli et al 2013). On the other hand, da Cruz et al applied non-equilibrium statistical physics to a system of economic agents obeying the Merton-Vasicek model for current banking regulation and forming a network of trades by means of the exchange of an "economic energy" (da Cruz and Lind 2012).…”
Section: Finance: Market Correlations and Concentrationmentioning
confidence: 99%