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The Limits of Financial Imagination: Free Investors, Efficient Markets, and Crisis

Horacio Ortiz ()
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Horacio Ortiz: CSI i3 - Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation i3 - Mines Paris - PSL (École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris) - PSL - Université Paris Sciences et Lettres - I3 - Institut interdisciplinaire de l’innovation - CNRS - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

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Abstract: Fieldwork with a team of investment managers investing in credit derivatives in Paris in 2004 shows how the concepts of "investor" and "market efficiency" are central in the technicalities of their procedures, in diverse and contradictory ways. The employees refer to their moral and political contents, as they are articulated in liberal philosophy and in financial regulation, to make sense of their careers and of the social role of finance. "Crisis" is then defined as a deviation from market efficiency, itself expected to lead to an optimal allocation of credit. These concepts thus constitute the limited repertoire of the meaning of practical rules followed by employees for a remuneration, within a bureaucratic commercial network, in a setting very different from the utopias from which the concepts stem. Therefore, anthropologists must not use them as analytic tools; rather, such concepts should be understood as part of the object of study.

Keywords: valuation; globalization; finance; global; distribution; évaluation; globalisation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (11)

Published in American Anthropologist, 2014, 116 (1), pp.18-50. ⟨10.1111/aman.12071⟩

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hal:journl:hal-00966544

DOI: 10.1111/aman.12071

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