美国历史上的金融危机

Christoph Nitschke, M. Rose
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摘要

美国历史上充满了频繁且往往具有破坏性的金融危机。它们与商业周期衰退同时发生,但它们的根源在于市场的政治设计。金融危机也源于市场交易的基础文化、知识体系和意识形态的变化。美国的政治经济发展催生、引导、修正了危机成因中的一般因素。从广义上看,金融危机的原因在其形式上是反复出现的,但在其结构上是历史上特定的:因果关系总是围绕着投资者对商业增长、股市收益、货币可用性、货币稳定性和政治可预测性的看法的相对突然的逆转。美国19世纪接连发生的金融危机,最恰当的描述是与做市、国家建设和帝国创建有关的动荡。美国金融体系的持续变化通过有效地向空间和组织变化的经济分配信贷,帮助了国家的快速增长。但是复杂的政治过程——无论是西部扩张,公司法律的发展,还是国家的对外关系——也为信贷的容易获得奠定了基础。系统性不稳定与政治制定的经济增长理念和理想之间的关系,随后在19世纪得到了反映。在第二次世界大战后的20年里,资本主义经历了一段没有崩溃的“黄金时代”之后,美国历史上金融危机的反复出现,与市场在治国方术中的主导地位不谋而合。银行业和其他危机是政治经济的产物。2007-2008年的全球金融危机不仅再次改变了监管环境,试图纠正过去的错误,而且大大拓宽了金融危机作为学术话题的话语范围。
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Financial Crises in American History
U.S. history is full of frequent and often devastating financial crises. They have coincided with business cycle downturns, but they have been rooted in the political design of markets. Financial crises have also drawn from changes in the underpinning cultures, knowledge systems, and ideologies of marketplace transactions. The United States’ political and economic development spawned, guided, and modified general factors in crisis causation. Broadly viewed, the reasons for financial crises have been recurrent in their form but historically specific in their configuration: causation has always revolved around relatively sudden reversals of investor perceptions of commercial growth, stock market gains, monetary availability, currency stability, and political predictability. The United States’ 19th-century financial crises, which happened in rapid succession, are best described as disturbances tied to market making, nation building, and empire creation. Ongoing changes in America’s financial system aided rapid national growth through the efficient distribution of credit to a spatially and organizationally changing economy. But complex political processes—whether Western expansion, the development of incorporation laws, or the nation’s foreign relations—also underlay the easy availability of credit. The relationship between systemic instability and ideas and ideals of economic growth, politically enacted, was then mirrored in the 19th century. Following the “Golden Age” of crash-free capitalism in the two decades after the Second World War, the recurrence of financial crises in American history coincided with the dominance of the market in statecraft. Banking and other crises were a product of political economy. The Global Financial Crisis of 2007–2008 not only once again changed the regulatory environment in an attempt to correct past mistakes, but also considerably broadened the discursive situation of financial crises as academic topics.
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