Over the past 25 years, the methods and techniques of economic geography
developed so as to give ‘voice’ to the political economy of landscape evolution.
Ways of writing case studies and ways of portraying the exercise and negotiation
of power between stakeholders have also evolved. If associated with economic
geography, it has proven to be a mode of inquiry that resonates with finance
(Jensen 1993) and with business and management (as exemplified by Wrigley
2000). But there are increasing problems with this kind of research strategy. Its
production-led analytical categories are often misleading about the geographical
scale at which decisions are taken and exaggerate the status of labour, capital, and
the state in relation to new forms of finance capitalism operating at the local and
global levels. To the extent that finance is recognized as an important driver
behind industrial and regional restructuring, it is too often located ‘offstage’
shrouded behind curtains of ignorance of its principal imperatives and modes of
practice. It is arguable that that which happens offstage behind those curtains is
in fact the real stage of modern capitalism and should be, in actuality, the focus
of economic geography.
In this chapter, I try to show how and why the geography of finance is so
important for the future of economic geography. My goal is to enlist the inter-
est and support of new generations of academics and practitioners concerned
to better understand the structure and performance of global financial markets.
Remarkably, the field of finance as an academic discipline is beginning to unravel
as the theoretical axioms that held it together are exposed as inadequate in the
light of the heterogeneity of practice. In doing so, I chart the rise of finance
over the past few decades, the increasing gap between the theory and practice of
finance, and a set of important research themes or problems that should engage
economic geography over the next 25–50 years. Inevitably, my view about the
future is partial: nevertheless, I hope the issues identified are sufficient to engage
the reader in pursuing their own research on the geography of finance.
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