The economic inefficiencies of market liberalization : The case of financial information in the Lond...
The case of financial information in the London Stock Exchange

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Bibliographic Details
Title: The economic inefficiencies of market liberalization : The case of financial information in the London Stock Exchange; The case of financial information in the London Stock Exchange
Authors and Corporations: Davis, Aeron
In: Global Media and Communication, 3, 2007, 2, p. 157-178
published:
SAGE Publications
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 157-178
ISSN: 1742-7673
1742-7665
DOI: 10.1177/1742766507078415
published in: Global Media and Communication
Language: English
Subjects:
Collection: SAGE Publications (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p> This article returns to the long-running public service versus free market debate in media and communications but from a rather unconventional perspective. Critics of the steady, globally driven marketization of national public media and information services tend to object on social and political grounds. Market advocates, in contrast, make their case on economic grounds. Greater competition in markets, including media markets, brings economic efficiencies which, in turn, are a `public good'. This economic assertion is rarely scrutinized within media studies. The study presented here, which looks at financial media and communications in the London Stock Exchange (LSE), does just this. In recent decades the LSE has been opened up to accommodate the needs of international financial institutions and international capital flows. This has had a detrimental impact on its media and information systems. Such liberalization, it is argued, has made the LSE less economically efficient, not more, and with quite negative economic (as well as social) consequences. </jats:p>