The financialization of policy preferences: financial asset ownership, regulation and crisis management

Author:

Pagliari Stefano1ORCID,Phillips Lauren M2,Young Kevin L3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of International Politics, City, University of London, London, UK

2. International Fund for Agricultural Development, Rome, Italy

3. Department of Political Science, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, USA

Abstract

Abstract Political economists have often drawn a hard line between the interests of owners of capital and the interests of labor. Yet over the past 30 years in Anglo-Saxon countries in particular, workers have become increasingly invested in capital markets activity through the privatization of pension systems and other incentives for market-based savings. In this article, we investigate whether this ‘financialization of everyday life’ has generated a convergence of policy preferences whereby individuals support policies traditionally associated with the financial sector. Using three separate datasets on the US population, we find evidence that financial asset ownership is associated with lower support for more stringent financial regulatory policy, and higher support for financial sector bailouts. Such effects on individual preferences are modest on average, but persist even when controlling for indicators of social class and a range of other conditions, circumstances and time periods.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Sociology and Political Science

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