Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation

This article explores some aspects of money as a social relation. Starting from Polanyi, it explores the nature of money as a non-commodity, real commodity, quasi-commodity, and fictitious commodity. The development of credit-debt relations is important in the last respect, especially in market econ...

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Published in:Finance and Society
Main Author: Bob Jessop
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2218/finsoc.v1i1.1369
https://doaj.org/article/5c62633d9ba3489d9b10bb484fc9de17
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:5c62633d9ba3489d9b10bb484fc9de17 2023-05-15T17:33:34+02:00 Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation Bob Jessop 2015-07-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.2218/finsoc.v1i1.1369 https://doaj.org/article/5c62633d9ba3489d9b10bb484fc9de17 EN eng University of Edinburgh http://financeandsociety.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1369 https://doaj.org/toc/2059-5999 2059-5999 doi:10.2218/finsoc.v1i1.1369 https://doaj.org/article/5c62633d9ba3489d9b10bb484fc9de17 Finance and Society, Vol 1, Iss 1, Pp 20-37 (2015) Finance HG1-9999 article 2015 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.2218/finsoc.v1i1.1369 2022-12-31T05:20:16Z This article explores some aspects of money as a social relation. Starting from Polanyi, it explores the nature of money as a non-commodity, real commodity, quasi-commodity, and fictitious commodity. The development of credit-debt relations is important in the last respect, especially in market economies where money in the form of coins and banknotes plays a minor role. This argument is developed through some key concepts from Marx concerning money as a fetishised and contradictory social relation, especially his crucial distinction, absent from Polanyi, between money as money and money as capital, each with its own form of fetishism. Attention then turns to Minsky’s work on Ponzi finance and what one might describe as cycles of the expansion of easy credit and the scramble for hard cash. This analysis is re-contextualised in terms of financialisation and finance-dominated accumulation, which promote securitisation and the autonomisation of credit money, interest-bearing capital. The article ends with brief reflections on the role of easy credit and hard cash in the surprising survival of neo-liberal economic and political regimes since the North Atlantic Financial Crisis became evident. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Finance and Society 1 1 20 37
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topic Finance
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spellingShingle Finance
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Bob Jessop
Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
topic_facet Finance
HG1-9999
description This article explores some aspects of money as a social relation. Starting from Polanyi, it explores the nature of money as a non-commodity, real commodity, quasi-commodity, and fictitious commodity. The development of credit-debt relations is important in the last respect, especially in market economies where money in the form of coins and banknotes plays a minor role. This argument is developed through some key concepts from Marx concerning money as a fetishised and contradictory social relation, especially his crucial distinction, absent from Polanyi, between money as money and money as capital, each with its own form of fetishism. Attention then turns to Minsky’s work on Ponzi finance and what one might describe as cycles of the expansion of easy credit and the scramble for hard cash. This analysis is re-contextualised in terms of financialisation and finance-dominated accumulation, which promote securitisation and the autonomisation of credit money, interest-bearing capital. The article ends with brief reflections on the role of easy credit and hard cash in the surprising survival of neo-liberal economic and political regimes since the North Atlantic Financial Crisis became evident.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bob Jessop
author_facet Bob Jessop
author_sort Bob Jessop
title Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
title_short Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
title_full Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
title_fullStr Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
title_full_unstemmed Hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: Critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
title_sort hard cash, easy credit, fictitious capital: critical reflections on money as a fetishised social relation
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2015
url https://doi.org/10.2218/finsoc.v1i1.1369
https://doaj.org/article/5c62633d9ba3489d9b10bb484fc9de17
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op_source Finance and Society, Vol 1, Iss 1, Pp 20-37 (2015)
op_relation http://financeandsociety.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1369
https://doaj.org/toc/2059-5999
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doi:10.2218/finsoc.v1i1.1369
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