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Special Issue on Fintech

The poverty of fintech? Psychometrics, credit infrastructures, and the limits of financialization

 
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Abstract

It is increasingly common to claim that innovative financial technologies (‘fintech’) will enable ever-wider access to credit. Previous critical accounts have often linked the development of fintech to processes of financialization. However, these arguments rarely take account of the uneven and highly limited character of ‘financial inclusion’ in practice. Drawing on engagements with science and technology studies and historical materialist political economy, this article advances an approach emphasizing processes of abstraction from productive activities, mediated through particular infrastructures, as core elements of financial accumulation. Seen in this light, psychometrics in particular and alternative credit data more broadly can be seen as flawed efforts to confront three sets of limits—(1) the necessarily reductive character of abstract framings, and the consequent challenges posed by their encounter with complex processes in practice, (2) the ways that systems for credit scoring interact with the infrastructures of existing financial systems, and (3) the difficulty of realizing financial profits in the context of widespread precarious livelihoods. Looking at alternative forms of credit data from this angle offers a way of grasping the truncated and uneven rollout of fintech, and hence of prompting more critical reflections about the limits to processes of financialization.

Acknowledgments

Previous versions of this paper were presented at the 2017 Annual Conference of the International Studies Association in Baltimore, and at the workshop on ‘The Changing Technological Infrastructures of Global Finance’ at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in May of 2017. I am grateful to participants in both events, to Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn, Chris Clarke, Korey Pasch, Tony Porter, and Susanne Soederberg, as well as to the anonymous reviewers and editorial board at RIPE for their comments, which have greatly improved the article.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes on contributors

Nick Bernards is Assistant Professor of Global Sustainable Development at the University of Warwick. He is author of The Global Governance of Precarity: Primitive Accumulation and the Politics of Irregular Work, and recent articles in New Political Economy and Development and Change.

Additional information

Funding

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Postdoctoral Fellowship 756-2016-0297.
 

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