Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Financial Cooperatives: between local communities and global forces

Raffaelli, Paola LU and Carabini, Camilla (2022) ICA CCR European Research Conference
Abstract
This paper explores the role of co-operative finance in the evolution of financialization of the global economy building upon the Italian context. Whereas financialization of daily life has globally affected many individuals around the world in the last decades (Martin, 2002), this has also re-shaped the role of financial institutions in society. Earlier research has suggested that private banks have shifted from providing intermediary services between savers and lenders, towards investing in short term investments and preferring liquidity (Mehrling, 2010). Economists suggest that as a consequence of this, the main social relation of the economy –between debtor and creditor– has been torn apart (Amato and Fantacci, 2014). In turn,... (More)
This paper explores the role of co-operative finance in the evolution of financialization of the global economy building upon the Italian context. Whereas financialization of daily life has globally affected many individuals around the world in the last decades (Martin, 2002), this has also re-shaped the role of financial institutions in society. Earlier research has suggested that private banks have shifted from providing intermediary services between savers and lenders, towards investing in short term investments and preferring liquidity (Mehrling, 2010). Economists suggest that as a consequence of this, the main social relation of the economy –between debtor and creditor– has been torn apart (Amato and Fantacci, 2014). In turn, anthropological studies have added more nuance, bringing to the forefront the fact that credit/debt relationship generates social bonds even in a context dominated by the market ideology that pretends to be apolitical or neutral (Graeber, 2011). Thus, social bonds take a more disaggregated shape and now include new middle men that trade other’s debt under the form of derivatives (Zaloom, 2010).
Drawing on this, we turn to the Italian co-operative financial sector and its capacity to (re)establish social relations through practices that counteract this global trend. Employing ethnographic methodology, we highlight three practices that are instrumental –although imperfect– in bringing creditor-debtor social relation back to the centre of the economy, namely: prioritizing classical banking activity (savings and lending), humanising credit risk, and promoting financial education. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
conference name
ICA CCR European Research Conference
conference location
Athens, Greece
conference dates
2022-07-13 - 2022-07-15
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f7e6eac5-846a-4bf3-a467-ed22e04211d7
date added to LUP
2022-05-16 16:13:36
date last changed
2024-06-26 12:48:46
@misc{f7e6eac5-846a-4bf3-a467-ed22e04211d7,
  abstract     = {{This paper explores the role of co-operative finance in the evolution of financialization of the global economy building upon the Italian context. Whereas financialization of daily life has globally affected many individuals around the world in the last decades (Martin, 2002), this has also re-shaped the role of financial institutions in society. Earlier research has suggested that private banks have shifted from providing intermediary services between savers and lenders, towards investing in short term investments and preferring liquidity (Mehrling, 2010). Economists suggest that as a consequence of this, the main social relation of the economy –between debtor and creditor– has been torn apart (Amato and Fantacci, 2014). In turn, anthropological studies have added more nuance, bringing to the forefront the fact that credit/debt relationship generates social bonds even in a context dominated by the market ideology that pretends to be apolitical or neutral (Graeber, 2011). Thus, social bonds take a more disaggregated shape and now include new middle men that trade other’s debt under the form of derivatives (Zaloom, 2010).<br/>Drawing on this, we turn to the Italian co-operative financial sector and its capacity to (re)establish social relations through practices that counteract this global trend. Employing ethnographic methodology, we highlight three practices that are instrumental –although imperfect– in bringing creditor-debtor social relation back to the centre of the economy, namely: prioritizing classical banking activity (savings and lending), humanising credit risk, and promoting financial education.}},
  author       = {{Raffaelli, Paola and Carabini, Camilla}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Financial Cooperatives: between local communities and global forces}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}