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Trusts and financialization
Author(s) -
Brooke Harrington
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
socio-economic review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.737
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1475-147X
pISSN - 1475-1461
DOI - 10.1093/ser/mww014
Subject(s) - financialization , business , economics , finance
This article identifies trusts as a legal structure associated with the global spread of financialization. Although trusts originated in Medieval England, they have acquired 10 a new significance in contemporary finance by virtue of their advantages in terms of profit maximization and capital mobility. As a result, trusts have become common in contemporary structured finance for corporations, in addition to their traditional functions as estate planning and asset protection vehicles for high-net-worth individuals. This article specifies three ways in which the trust structure has facilitated 15 the global spread of financialization: by privileging the rentier–investor within the world economy; by perpetuating a distinctively Anglo-American approach to finance internationally; and by increasing the autonomy of finance vis-a-vis the nation-state. This study shares the primarily descriptive and conceptual intent of Krippner’s work on financialization, but extends it in two ways: by comparing trusts to the better20 known corporate form of organizing financial activity, and by showing how private capital is implicated in the financialized economy alongside corporate wealth.

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