Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Changing Nature of Money in a Changing International Monetary System
- 2 Money at the Frontier
- 3 The Transformation of Monetary Governance in Pakistan
- 4 Exploring Monetary Change amongst Households
- 5 Fieldwork Findings
- 6 Unstable Money and Risk Mitigation in the New Economy
- 7 Money in Theory and Money in Pakistan
- 8 Conclusion: Central Bank Challenges - Financial Inclusion with Frontier Money
- Appendix
- References
- Index
5 - Fieldwork Findings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 March 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Changing Nature of Money in a Changing International Monetary System
- 2 Money at the Frontier
- 3 The Transformation of Monetary Governance in Pakistan
- 4 Exploring Monetary Change amongst Households
- 5 Fieldwork Findings
- 6 Unstable Money and Risk Mitigation in the New Economy
- 7 Money in Theory and Money in Pakistan
- 8 Conclusion: Central Bank Challenges - Financial Inclusion with Frontier Money
- Appendix
- References
- Index
Summary
As discussed in Chapter 4, finance theory informs the approach taken by this study to households by identifying volatility as a cost burden of risk and identifying potential risk management strategies through portfolio allocation. In applying this micro-level analysis to households in Pakistan, evidence of monetary volatility as a substantive concern for ordinary people is sought out. Where found, such findings help to substantiate the argument that the liberalisation of money and markets and consequent exposure of money to global liquidity has generated meaningful change in money and the monetary environment.
This chapter discusses how, by drawing on field interviews, the study seeks out evidence of the substantive experience of risk attached to the liberalised rupee amongst households and in local bazaars. The chapter opens with a review of existing methodologies for interrogating household finances before setting out the methods utilised in field interviews for this study. The second part of the chapter systematically lays out the findings from field interviews in raw form. Worked in with the macro analysis from chapters prior, secondary fieldwork and newspaper articles, these findings are analysed in Chapter 6 to produce the conclusions of the final two chapters.
The field interviews thus inform the analysis of the monetary environment in Pakistan yet the interviews do not seek to unambiguously prove certain findings. The intention is not to fully scope the dimensions of alternative ‘currencies’, but to identify the ways in which the conventional understanding of the pre-eminence of state money as means of exchange, store of value and unit of account is being challenged in often ad hoc but quite comprehensive ways. Hence, the field interviews do not seek to establish a schema of risk management strategies through proportional sampling and a rigorous quantitative survey. Neither do they seek to develop an ethnographic description of the subjective and culturally mediated experience of financial risk. Rather, the field interviews seek to open up the question of money and globalisation to further analysis by exploring disruptions to mainstream assumptions about money and its governance in the field.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Risk and the Rupee in Pakistan's New EconomyFinancial Inclusion and Monetary Change in a Frontier Market, pp. 124 - 148Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020