Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Monaghan, LF,O'Flynn, M
2017
December
British Journal Of Sociology
The Madoffization of Irish society: from Ponzi finance to sociological critique
Published
()
Optional Fields
Madoffization Ireland debt crisis neoliberalism financial capital ECONOMIC-CRISIS IRELAND MEDIA
68
670
692
Financialization and neoliberal policy created the Celtic Tiger. This economic miracle' furthered creditors' and property developers' speculative interests, leading to an unstable financial pyramid that eventually imploded in 2008 with catastrophic consequences for Irish society. Using the sociological imagination as social critique, this paper offers a lens on fictitious capital and Ponzi finance in the context of Ireland's boom and bust. Critique is advanced using the Madoffization of society thesis, a sociological heuristic that draws formal comparisons between Bernie Madoff's US$65 billion Ponzi scheme, which collapsed in 2008, and financialized capitalism. The Madoff case exhibits five main elements or forms which, it has been argued, underlie the varying content of life on a much broader scale: accumulation by debt expansion, mass deception, efforts to maintain secrecy and silence, obfuscation, and scapegoating. In conclusion, a crucial difference between the Madoff case and the Madoffization of Irish society is underscored. Discussion also moves from critique to hope amidst calls to renew sociology and transform financialized capitalism.
10.1111/1468-4446.12287
Grant Details