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Cornel Ban, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
"Few issues have attracted as much scholarly and public attention as the autonomy of states under conditions of financial globalisation. Yet Nagel sheds new light on the thorny relationship between states and markets by pointing to the role of expertise and its strategic use by domestic governments. This book will certainly be of interest to all those who care about the changing role of state capacity and, importantly, outside the Western world."
Manuela Moschella, Scuola Normale Superiore, Italy
"How to explain the continued divergence of national financial policies in the face of waves of financialization? Pointing to the agency of experts and the power of ideas as crucial differentiating variables, this book offers a succinct and fascinating account of the different fates of Argentina, Chile, Japan, and South Korea following the initial liberalization of the 1970s. Well researched and carefully argued, this book is a major contribution by an up-and-coming scholar."
Matthias Thiemann, Sciences Po, France
"This thought-provoking book sheds novel light on how countries frame financialisation. It highlights a key factor - expertise - that enables governments to exert domestic agency in resisting convergence in the global economy. This work is theoretically sophisticated and empirically rich - it is a required reading for anyone interested in the governance of finance and, more broadly, comparative and international political economy."
Lucia Quaglia, University of Bologna, Italy