Strategy
Book Review: The Great Transition, By Emmanuel Daniel
This news service takes a look at a new book that argues that the world is going through the "personalization" of finance, upending traditional models and approaches to banking, insurance, asset management, and more.
A book where you can read about the marvels of mobile apps for
bank services, the reasons why the demise of LIBOR was
misunderstood, and the mind-bending world of digital assets,
might not be bedtime reading. But The Great Transition,
by Emmanuel Daniel, a fintech influencer and thought leader,
proved an engrossing read.
The book (211 pages) argues that we are going through the
“personalization of finance,” – a trend that is being shaped
by technologies such as blockchain (distributed ledger
technology), decentralized finance and breakthroughs in other
technologies.
Daniel argues that we are moving from a world of “mass
individualism” to a model where the individual is more empowered
than in earlier iterations of capitalism. I think he does not
quite get this right. After WW2, it is true that people consumed
a vast array of goods and services from corporations, but
presumably, if what the firms produced was poor or inadequate,
then competition - at least in theory - was designed to
get past that. Daniel writes about how firms “perfected the art
of achieving industrial levels of individualism by promoting
greed, consumption and self-gratification.” Well, that’s a matter
of opinion. Freedom includes the freedom to not consume some
of these things and, as we saw in the post-war period, quite
a lot of (mostly middle class) folk reacted against this
supposedly vulgar affluence. A feature of free markets is that
people have the freedom to develop new ways of making and
consuming, which is exactly what has happened.
Despite some of my reservations on points such as this, I liked
the book. It is a useful and rapid tour around a lot of the
developments that I am sure readers encounter all the time.
Daniel writes about how established ways of banking, asset
management, insurance and other fields are being shaken up,
and not just by the financial earthquake of 2008. Daniel argues
that many incumbent firms know and fear that their models could
be disrupted. But even so, too many companies see modern
technology as just a new set of clothes, rather than about
changing the whole structure. A lot of new tech seems to be
mainly about squeezing efficiencies out of existing service
offerings, rather than creating new services that did not exist
before. But Daniel points to ways that real innovation might
happen, leading to a true personalization of the financial
world.
It's worth giving his definition of personalization (page 189),
as it is an ever-present concept in the book: “Personalization
refers to the increasing ability of individuals to control their
own data, identity, and how they choose to transact. This book
argues that personalization will have a profound effect on how
institutions that generate profit from aggregating people’s data
on public platforms will survive in the future. It also has
massive implications for how society as a whole will be
organized.”
That last sentence raises questions, for example, about what
happens to financial privacy – a subject this news service
regularly reflects on.
Daniel wrestles a lot with what this new world he envisages will
look like. Besides a glossary at the end of the book to keep us
informed about all these terms, he manages to get through a
tremendous amount of detail, firing out masses of stories, names,
and terms in paragraph after paragraph. At times it was like
trying to drink from a firehose.
The book has plenty of references for further reading; a merit
that it doesn’t overdo. This is a book designed to stimulate the
intellectual juices rather than trying to be the last word. And
that is wise, given how fast technology and financial services
continue to evolve.
The Great Transition: The Personalization of Finance Is
Here, is published by World Scientific.
Daniel, besides other achievements, is the founder of The
Asian Banker and Wealth and Society, and consults
with banks and fintech businesses.