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15. Retrieving Chance: Neoliberalism, Finance Capitalism, and the Antinomies of Governmental Reason
- Fordham University Press
- Chapter
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Greed is often demonized as a cause of the recent crisis. Marasco views this modern "value" not as a cause of the crash, but as a consequence endemic to our society. It is not greed for money and wealth that produces socioeconomic inequalities. Rather, it is a society structured by the principle of socioeconomic inequality that unleashes a particular form of greed that chases after money. The author argues that what is needed in analyzing the "intellectual foundations" of the financial crisis is the vexed term: neoliberalism. The essay dissects neoliberalism into five related theses, contextualized by the Great Recession. At the root of her analysis is the insight that neoliberalism is, at root, a mode of political rationality that is antithetical to chance. On the one hand, neoliberalism refuses chance. On the other hand, it imagines crises as unpredictable chance occurrences that are simply part of the capitalist system. Marasco argues that neoliberalism both refuses and needs the idea of chance in ways that reveal its desire to be seen as a necessary and unquestionable mode of political organization.