Thieves, Fools, Fraudsters, and Gamblers? The Ambivalence of Moral Criticism in the Credit Crunch of 2008

2015 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Thieves, Fools, Fraudsters, and Gamblers? The Ambivalence of Moral Criticism in the Credit Crunch of 2008​
Muennich, S. ​ (2015) 
European Journal of Sociology56(1) pp. 93​-118​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003975615000053 

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Authors
Muennich, Sascha 
Abstract
This article examines public debates on the legitimacy of banking profits in the 2008 credit crunch. A content analysis of 957 newspaper articles published in Germany and the UK in the early weeks after the Lehman Brothers collapse examines critical statements directed at illegitimate forms of financial profit in order to identify the cultural legitimacy of financial capitalism. The conceptual framework provided by the French sociology of justification points to the role of shared orders of value as a normative reference for public discourses. In both national debates, four important boundaries for legitimate profits were drawn that concerned the problems of ownership, risk-management capacities of traders, fraudulent client relations, and speculative gambling. The meaning of this classical moral criticism of banks was transformed in the context of the 2008 crisis: a line between normal and excessive financial profits was drawn, defining an area of legitimate profit-seeking that hewed to the basic assumptions of the market model. Economic theory was used as a scheme of public economic morality. The seemingly harsh critical debate effectively reproduced a legitimate image of a functioning financial market, deflecting public attention away from the structural ambivalences of financial profit-seeking and granting legitimacy to the institutional status quo of financial capitalism.
Issue Date
2015
Journal
European Journal of Sociology 
Organization
Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät ; Institut für Soziologie ; Abteilung II: Politische Soziologie und Sozialpolitik 
ISSN
1474-0583; 0003-9756

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