The essays in this volume explain how financial inflation shifts banking
and financial markets towards more speculative activity, changing the
financial structure of the economy and corroding the social and
political values that underlie welfare state capitalism. The essays
begin with an article that was published in the Financial Times that
highlights the problems of excess debt, which emerges when financial
inflation exceeds the rate at which prices and incomes are rising.
Subsequent essays examine the consequences of this for money and
international financial, and for financial and accounting techniques
such as financial innovation, goodwill and leverage. Among them are
critical essays on the role that finance theory has played in covering
up the problems caused by finance. These include a portrait of the
pioneer of modern finance theorist Fischer Black. Further essays discuss
the role of finance in economic inequality, fostering a new political,
social and economic divide between the asset-rich and the asset-poor as
the housing market (and asset markets in general) become the new
'welfare state of the middle classes'. A final group of essays looks at
how financial inflation finally broke down and financial crisis broke
out. A previously unpublished essay examines the limitations of central
banks in securing financial stability, while two concluding essays
discuss the role of international business in transmitting the crisis
around the world, and how developing countries become affected by the
crisis.