the interstices between markets so as to oversee risk exposures set against param-
eters managed by senior executives of the corporation. Not only is there a geog-
raphy to risk-management, the hierarchy of tasks and functions within such
complex organizations have quite distinctive ethnic and gender-specific labour
markets: for example, compare the sources of clerical and semi-professional
employees against the sources of highly educated investment professionals in the
City of London or for that matter New York. In a nutshell, it is worth investi-
gating why traders are men and why those that market trading functions to
clients are women (see generally McDowell 1997).
In suggesting that there is a significant gap between the principles and prac-
tice of finance, and in suggesting that the practice of finance itself is subject to
recognized social processes of differentiation and distinction, I echo arguments
made by a number of social scientists (see, for example Knorr-Cetina and Preda
2004). At the same time, recognizing that at the core of finance there are well-
established and observed customs and norms of research, the world of finance is
open to the ideals and methodologies championed by economic geographers
over last couple of decades.
Working from the bottom (the practice of finance) to the top (the theory of
finance) provides us an opportunity to interrogate accepted principles. This has
the virtue, of course, of building a conceptual understanding of the world of
finance by induction rather than deduction. It also has the virtue of joining an
increasing number of those in the finance industry who are seeking new ways of
conceptualizing how financial markets work. Most importantly, the tools of
economic geography can bring new insights about the structure and perform-
ance of financial markets given that the threads binding the field of finance
together (such as the efficient markets hypothesis) are unravelling. At the same
time, there remains scope for holistic models of the structure and performance
of global financial markets, especially those that take seriously the interaction
between markets and the geography of capital flows from the community
through to the system of global circulation (Clark 2005). These models may
require, however, the insights of close dialogue and the econometric techniques
of large-scale data analysis (Clark and Wójcik 2005a, 2005b).
Dostları ilə paylaş: