Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
This article argues that understanding contemporary money production requires a hybrid view of state–market power and attention to how discretion—the power to relate rules to practices—is distributed. Drawing on Deleuze, Guattari, and Barnes, I develop an assemblage theory to analyze the rise of the asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) market. I show that shadow banking emerged not from deregulation or state–market cooperation, but from a displacement of discretion from policymakers to banks amid fragmented policymaking in the 1960s–80s, whereby regulatory stringency paradoxically enabled monetary expansion.