Headlong into the Polanyian Dilemma: The Impact of Middle-Class Moral Panic on the British Government's Response to the Sub-prime Crisis

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Headlong into the Polanyian Dilemma: The Impact of Middle-Class Moral Panic on the British Government's Response to the Sub-prime Crisis
Abstract
This article focuses on the discursive construction in Britain of a middle-class moral panic occasioned by the distress caused to self-styled ‘responsible mortgage borrowers’ by falling house prices. In the context of the move towards asset-based welfare the sub-prime crisis manifested itself most obviously in the popular consciousness as a threat to housing market wealth. The Labour government used the political space opened up by the narrative of middle-class moral panic in order to protect banks' balance sheets from the consequences of their own failed investments in mortgage-backed securities. The ensuing arrangements immunised banks from the implications of market self-regulation in the first-phase response to the sub-prime crisis while simultaneously allowing them to continue to impose the experience of market self-regulation on their customers. An increasingly asymmetric approach to banking regulation has arisen analogous to that which Karl Polanyi associated with the contradictory co-existence of market and non-market forms.
Publication
The British Journal of Politics & International Relations
Volume
11
Issue
3
Pages
422-437
Date
August 1, 2009
Language
English
ISSN
1467-856X
Short Title
Headlong into the Polanyian Dilemma
Accessed
2017-05-10, 7:01 p.m.
Library Catalog
Wiley Online Library
Citation
Watson, Matthew. 2009. “Headlong into the Polanyian Dilemma: The Impact of Middle-Class Moral Panic on the British Government’s Response to the Sub-Prime Crisis.” The British Journal of Politics & International Relations 11 (3): 422–37. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-856X.2009.00379.x.
Publication year
Keywords
  • market self-regulation
  • moral panic
  • protective re-embedding of finance
  • sub-prime crisis

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