Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation

The past 30 years has seen an enormous growth of formalised regulation, which some have characterised as part of a wider phenomenon of `regulatory capitalism’. This has also been a period of the hegemony of neo-liberal ideologies of free markets. The paradox aptly described by Stephen Vogel as `free...

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Main Author: Sol Picciotto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law 2011-11-01
Series:Oñati Socio-Legal Series
Online Access:http://ssrn.com/abstract=1955893
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spelling doaj-b793229d437e4c068b886a8e3bbcf0232020-11-24T21:05:21ZengOñati International Institute for the Sociology of LawOñati Socio-Legal Series2079-59712011-11-011211Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-RegulationSol PicciottoThe past 30 years has seen an enormous growth of formalised regulation, which some have characterised as part of a wider phenomenon of `regulatory capitalism’. This has also been a period of the hegemony of neo-liberal ideologies of free markets. The paradox aptly described by Stephen Vogel as `freer markets, more rules’ has not received an adequate explanation, despite an equally enormous growth of studies and theories of regulation. This paper will argue that insufficient attention has been given to the relationship between the `naturalization’ of property rights, and the growth of regulation. It is generally accepted, particularly by liberal theory, that private property rights are essential to free markets. However, the acceptance as `natural’ of existing forms of private rights to property, in an era when economic activity has become increasingly socialized, generates instabilities, to which a frequent response is regulation, often of a hybrid public-private character. This argument will be developed through two examples. Firstly, the analysis of financial market regulation, which over the past 30 years has been a paradigm of hyper-regulation, but leaving untouched the private property protections that have fuelled `financialization’ and speculation, and generated crises culminating in the crash of 2008-9. Secondly, an account of how struggles over the scope and definition of intellectual property rights have moulded the emergence and development of today’s `knowledge economy’, as the historic tension between private rights and the public domain has given way to the creation of various forms of regulated `commons’, allocating rights and remuneration.http://ssrn.com/abstract=1955893
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sol Picciotto
spellingShingle Sol Picciotto
Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation
Oñati Socio-Legal Series
author_facet Sol Picciotto
author_sort Sol Picciotto
title Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation
title_short Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation
title_full Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation
title_fullStr Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation
title_full_unstemmed Paradoxes of Regulating Corporate Capitalism: Property Rights and Hyper-Regulation
title_sort paradoxes of regulating corporate capitalism: property rights and hyper-regulation
publisher Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law
series Oñati Socio-Legal Series
issn 2079-5971
publishDate 2011-11-01
description The past 30 years has seen an enormous growth of formalised regulation, which some have characterised as part of a wider phenomenon of `regulatory capitalism’. This has also been a period of the hegemony of neo-liberal ideologies of free markets. The paradox aptly described by Stephen Vogel as `freer markets, more rules’ has not received an adequate explanation, despite an equally enormous growth of studies and theories of regulation. This paper will argue that insufficient attention has been given to the relationship between the `naturalization’ of property rights, and the growth of regulation. It is generally accepted, particularly by liberal theory, that private property rights are essential to free markets. However, the acceptance as `natural’ of existing forms of private rights to property, in an era when economic activity has become increasingly socialized, generates instabilities, to which a frequent response is regulation, often of a hybrid public-private character. This argument will be developed through two examples. Firstly, the analysis of financial market regulation, which over the past 30 years has been a paradigm of hyper-regulation, but leaving untouched the private property protections that have fuelled `financialization’ and speculation, and generated crises culminating in the crash of 2008-9. Secondly, an account of how struggles over the scope and definition of intellectual property rights have moulded the emergence and development of today’s `knowledge economy’, as the historic tension between private rights and the public domain has given way to the creation of various forms of regulated `commons’, allocating rights and remuneration.
url http://ssrn.com/abstract=1955893
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