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characteristic of fi
nancial elites and elites more generally in a process well docu-
mented in the literature, postgraduate education also serves to societally and territo-
rially embed fi
nanciers, temporally at least, in particular national and city-specifi
c
international fi nancial districts. This involvement demonstrates how the topological
and topographical are entwined within fi
nancial elite labor markets, as well as the
role of education within this. In the following, I draw attention to two ways in which
postgraduate education serves to embed early-career fi nancial elites into the U.K.
national economy and the City-specifi
c international fi
nancial district in London in
particular: fi
rst, briefl y, by examining the role of education in inculcating elites into
the regulatory frameworks of London and the United Kingdom; and second, by
examining the intersection of what remain predominately national education sys-
tems with the more transnational qualities of elite fi
nancial labor markets.
Beginning with geographically specifi
c fi nancial services regulatory frame-
works, postgraduate education gained importance because it provided individuals
the opportunity to study for the credentials needed to practice as a fi
nancier and to
offer investment advice in the City. At the time this chapter’s research was under-
taken, this meant being registered with the Financial Services Authority (FSA) in
the United Kingdom, as the following interviewee summarized (for a fuller discus-
sion of this element of postgraduate education geographies see Hall & Appleyard,
2009 ):
The FSA exams basically mean I can work in the United Kingdom—if I work overseas then
I’d have to go through a similar process—it’s not necessarily a huge problem but it does
mean for the moment I’m really a British banker and there would be some delay in terms of
me generating revenue if I move to Dubai. ( Investment bank vice president, London, 2010)
Beyond this regulatory element, the second way elite education served to embed
fi nanciers into particular forms of practice and associated career pathways was
through its relationship to the broader national education landscape in the United
Kingdom. In this respect, although fi nancial labor markets are often assumed to be
global in scope, a signifi
cant proportion of new recruits to the City come from the
United Kingdom. These individuals typically hold undergraduate degrees from
either Oxbridge or the Russell Group, a collection of 24 of the most research-
intensive and selective universities in the United Kingdom. This fact poses impor-
tant questions about how a predominately national education system intersects with
the more global nature of elite fi
nancial labor markets and what the implications of
this are for early-career fi nancial elites working in investment banking in London’s
fi nancial district. As Brown and Hesketh (
2004 , p. 23) argue in regard to graduate
labor markets more generally:
Some occupational elites operate in a global rather than a local context, but they accumulate
elite credentials and other cultural assets within national and local contexts. How domestic
competitions are organized continue to be important to understanding the fates of the even-
tual winners and losers.
In the case of fi
nance, one of the most distinctive features of the U.K. university
system impacting how early-career elites enter fi
nancial labor markets are the
numeracy skills required by the increasingly technical nature of investment banking
6 (Post)graduate Education Markets and the Formation of Mobile Transnational…
zurĂĽck zum
Buch Knowledge and Networks"
Knowledge and Networks
- Titel
- Knowledge and Networks
- Autoren
- Johannes GlĂĽckler
- Emmanuel Lazega
- Ingmar Hammer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-45023-0
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 390
- Schlagwörter
- Human Geography, Innovation/Technology Management, Economic Geography, Knowledge, Discourse
- Kategorie
- Technik