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The (European) derisking state

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  • Daniela Gabor

Abstract

The emerging green capitalist state in the Global North is a derisking state. The derisking state enlists private capital into achieving public policy priorities by tinkering with risk/returns on private investments in sovereign bonds, currency, social infrastructure (schools, roads, hospitals and houses, care homes and prisons, water plants and natural parks) and most recently, green industries. The concern with the production of investibility forges a state-capital relationship where capital dominates. Yet the specific architecture of regulatory, fiscal and monetary derisking interventions varies across polities, is activated at different speeds and with different degrees of coordination, contingent on specific macro financial constraints and vulnerable to political strains. Both in the EU and the US, derisking has emerged as the method to organise green industrial upgrading in the Green Deal Industrial Plan and the US Inflation Reduction Act, successfully generating elite support for taboobreaking autonomous strategic visions, in contrast with the state-directed approach in the CHIPS Act that disciplines private capital into national security priorities for semiconductor manufacturing. Yet in the EU, «whatever it takes» derisking does not easily translate from monetary to fiscal policy, because it requires Member States to agree on relaxing the distinctly European macro financial constraints around the provision of state-aid. The institutional response to these constraints, the European Sovereignty Fund, reinforces the derisking imperative. Furthermore, the limited scope for disciplining (carbon) capital raises serious doubts about the overall suitability of derisking for governing decarbonisation.

Suggested Citation

  • Daniela Gabor, 2023. "The (European) derisking state," Stato e mercato, Società editrice il Mulino, issue 1, pages 53-84.
  • Handle: RePEc:mul:jl9ury:doi:10.1425/107674:y:2023:i:1:p:53-84
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Golka, Philipp & Murau, Steffen & Thie, Jan-Erik, 2023. "Towards a Public Sustainable Finance Paradigm for the Green Transition," SocArXiv zcvue, Center for Open Science.
    2. Skyrman, Viktor, 2024. "Industrial policy, progressive derisking, and the financing of Europe's green transition," Working Papers 78, Austrian Foundation for Development Research (ÖFSE).
    3. Bruno Bonizzi & Annina Kaltenbrunner, 2024. "International financial subordination in the age of asset manager capitalism," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 56(2), pages 603-626, March.

    More about this item

    Keywords

    Central Banks and Their Policies; E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy • Stabilization • Treasury Policy; F45 - Macroeconomic Issues of Monetary Unions; F64 - Environment; Q58 - Government Policy.;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • E63 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Macroeconomic Policy, Macroeconomic Aspects of Public Finance, and General Outlook - - - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization; Treasury Policy
    • F45 - International Economics - - Macroeconomic Aspects of International Trade and Finance - - - Macroeconomic Issues of Monetary Unions
    • F64 - International Economics - - Economic Impacts of Globalization - - - Environment
    • Q58 - Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics; Environmental and Ecological Economics - - Environmental Economics - - - Environmental Economics: Government Policy

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