Neo-liberalism, finance-dominated accumulation, and permanent austerity: A cultural political economy perspective (in Social policy in times of austerity: Global economic crisis and the new politics of welfare) (original) (raw)
In line with interest in varieties of capitalism, one might expect to find varieties of austerity. This is confirmed by the historical record: austerity has different origins, dynamics, and effects in different periods; and by comparisons in the same periods. Another source of variation is how (and how far) pursuit of austerity re-articulates the economic and political in terms of policy, politics, and polity. This chapter explores these issues through cultural political economy (CPE). This heterodox theoretical approach takes the cultural turn seriously but not one-sidedly in the critique of political economy. It can be said to combine interest in the economic, political and social imaginaries that shape capital accumulation and state projects with a critical analysis of the changing articulation of the economic and political in capitalist social formations. After brief comments in these terms on austerity policies in the ‘golden age’ of Atlantic Fordism, the analysis concentrates on post-Fordist accumulation regimes. To illustrate the variegation of austerity policies, politics and political transformation in this context, the US and UK serve as exemplars of neoliberal finance-dominated accumulation. Attention then turns to economic and fisco-financial crises in Continental Europe as organised in the shadow of a German-led neo-mercantilist bloc. European efforts to address contagion effects from the North Atlantic Financial Crisis (NAFC) as well as the Eurozone’s sui generis crisis dynamics involve other forms of austerity policies and politics. This is illustrated from Germany and Greece. The conclusion considers the limits to neoliberal austerity and the catastrophic equilibrium of forces that is blocking efforts to overcome them.
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