When Finance Takes Over
This graph shows the increasing share of GDP taken up by the financial sector. Who cares? Bruce Bartlett explains that the growth of finance is not healthy for the overall economy.
According to Stephen G. Cecchetti and Enisse Kharroubi of the Bank for International Settlements, the impact of finance on economic growth is very positive in the early stages of development. But beyond a certain point it becomes negative, because the financial sector competes with other sectors for scarce resources.
Ozgur Orhangazi of Roosevelt University has found that investment in the real sector of the economy falls when financialization rises. Moreover, rising fees paid by nonfinancial corporations to financial markets have reduced internal funds available for investment, shortened their planning horizon and increased uncertainty. . .
According to research by the economists Jon Bakija, Adam Cole and Bradley T. Heim, financialization is a principal driver of the rising share of income going to the ultrawealthy – the top 0.1 percent of the income distribution.
Kevin Philips wrote more than a decade ago (yes, before the recession) that financialization of an economy and growing inequality are signs of decline in an economic power. And it has only gotten worse since then.
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