On 4/26/13 5:13 PM, Doug Henwood wrote:
>
> On Apr 26, 2013, at 5:06 PM, Louis Proyect <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Basically, my wife's dissertation.
>
> got an abstract?

 From Proquest:

This comparative case study explores the relationship between hegemony 
and international financial stability. In particular, it examines how 
the U.S. exercises power through financial crisis management and whether 
hegemony is a necessary and sufficient precondition for stability. This 
study's purpose is to contribute to the debate surrounding the U.S.'s 
role in international financial system maintenance by comparing one 
Bretton Woods with two post-Bretton Woods crises. The study examines 
data in order to evaluate the four major theories of hegemony positing 
that the U.S. was responsible for the relatively smooth operation of the 
postwar financial order. When the 1950s and 1960s were idealized as the 
golden age of stability, events such as the financial crises of the 
1970s and 1990s were then seen as a retreat from hegemonic 
responsibilities and surrender to multi-polar, unstable and crisis prone 
systems.

Are periods of hegemony more conducive to crisis prevention, financial 
openness and system maintenance? Is the conventional literature correct 
in characterizing the post-Bretton Woods system as one "crisis," 
"disorder" or "post-hegemonic"? Our findings affirm the main thesis of 
this study that there is no "sufficient" correlation between the 
concentration of financial power (hegemony) in the international system 
and the degree of stability (absence or presence of crises) in the 
system. The U.S. intervention in 1966 through the imposition of higher 
reserve requirements conflicted with the need to provide continued 
stability during a period of growing international liquidity. Against 
the assumption of international instability as a result of U.S. decline, 
the 1974 and 1998 crises further confirmed that post-Bretton Woods 
paradoxically reinforced the same goals as Bretton Woods: (1) promotion 
of free trade and open finance, (2) intervention in international 
financial crises to maintain a liberal international order.

There is a gap in the prevailing paradigms precisely because they can't 
anticipate the kinds of expressions of renewed power and contradictions 
of crisis management that are present in our three cases. Conventional 
literature makes broad statements yet cannot account for the specific 
instances of "contradictions" of state power. This is where this study 
can make its contribution to the debate on hegemony and global finance.

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