TY - JOUR
T1 - Too embedded to fail
T2 - The ECB and the necessity of calculating Europe
AU - Mudge, Stephanie L.
AU - Vauchez, Antoine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Calling into question the meaning of "independence" in contemporary central banking, the present article investigates the social origins and post-crisis persistence of the European Central Bank's (ECB) core macroe-conomic model, despite broad acknowledgement of its failure to anticipate the financial crisis. We trace the making of the model; the process by which it became dominant in European central banking and beyond; criticism in the wake of its failure to predict the financial-cum-Eurozone crisis; and its persistence, nonetheless, in the crisis' aftermath. We argue that the formation, meanings, and persistence of the ECB's model cannot be understood as effects of the bank's independence or the model's intrinsic qualities. Rather, the model's trajectory is best understood in light of the ECB's transnationally embedded social location in international finance, professional economics, and European governing institutions. The necessity of calculating Europe, irrespective of the accuracy or predictive strength of the model being used, has less to do with the ECB's independence from domestic politics and more to do with its transnational embeddedness - or, stated differently, that the ECB is, in a sense, too embedded to fail.
AB - Calling into question the meaning of "independence" in contemporary central banking, the present article investigates the social origins and post-crisis persistence of the European Central Bank's (ECB) core macroe-conomic model, despite broad acknowledgement of its failure to anticipate the financial crisis. We trace the making of the model; the process by which it became dominant in European central banking and beyond; criticism in the wake of its failure to predict the financial-cum-Eurozone crisis; and its persistence, nonetheless, in the crisis' aftermath. We argue that the formation, meanings, and persistence of the ECB's model cannot be understood as effects of the bank's independence or the model's intrinsic qualities. Rather, the model's trajectory is best understood in light of the ECB's transnationally embedded social location in international finance, professional economics, and European governing institutions. The necessity of calculating Europe, irrespective of the accuracy or predictive strength of the model being used, has less to do with the ECB's independence from domestic politics and more to do with its transnational embeddedness - or, stated differently, that the ECB is, in a sense, too embedded to fail.
KW - Central banks, Eurozone, scientization, economists, forecasting, field-theory, European Central Bank
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U2 - 10.12759/hsr.43.2018.3.248-273
DO - 10.12759/hsr.43.2018.3.248-273
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85055668618
SN - 0172-6404
VL - 43
SP - 248
EP - 273
JO - Historical Social Research
JF - Historical Social Research
IS - 3
ER -