Synopses & Reviews
Although international finance and banking has been the subject of research and writing, the economic impact of banks on industrial structures and the relations between banking and industry in the twentieth century have remained relatively unexplored areas. This volume examines and interprets the economic effect of the financing of industry by banks and of the banks' credit intermediation in industrialized economies. Particular attention is given to the interplay of economics and politics, to the connections between bankers and industrialists, and to the significance of interlocking directorships. A special section is devoted to a hitherto wholly neglected problem in economic history: the vital influence of universal banking in small but highly industrialized countries in central Europe and Scandinavia.
Review
"...a book made in heaven for monetary economists of the comparative-historical-institutional-interdisciplinary persuasion....a wide-ranging collection of essays--every one of them rich in institutional and historical detail....the reader comes away with a deeper understanding of the complex interplay between the macroeconomic crises of the 1920s and 1930s and the political-economic factors behind the widespread restructuring of domestic financial systems in the 1930s." Jane Knodell, Journal of Economic Issues"...highly informative....This is a most useful collection and will prove a fruitful starting point for further comparative study." Theo Balderston, Business History Review"...valuable if not absolutely essential reading for anyone interested in the interwar economy." Rondo Cameron, Journal of Comparative Economics
Synopsis
This volume of essays interprets the economic effect of the financing of industry by banks and of the banks' credit intermediation in industrial economies. Particular attention is given to the interplay of economics and politics, to the connections between bankers and industrialists, and to the significance of interlocking directorships.
Synopsis
This volume examines the economic effects of the financing of industry by banks, and the banks' credit intermediation in industrial economies. While international finance and banking have been the subject of much previous research and writing, the particular area examined in these essays has remained hitherto almost totally neglected. Particular attention is paid to the interplay of economics and politics, and a special section is devoted to the influence of universal banking in small but highly industrialised countries in central Europe and Scandinavia.
Synopsis
This volume examines the financing of industry by banks and the banks' credit intermediation in industrial economies.
Synopsis
This volume of essays interprets the economic effect of the financing of industry by banks and of the banks' credit intermediation in industrial economies. Particular attention is given to the interplay of economics and politics, to the connections between bankers and industrialists, and to the significance of interlocking directorships.
Synopsis
This volume examines the economic effects of the financing of industry by banks, and the banks' credit intermediation in industrial economies. While international finance and banking have been the subject of much previous research and writing, the particular area examined in these essays has remained hitherto almost totally neglected. Particular attention is paid to the interplay of economics and politics, and a special section is devoted to the influence of universal banking in small but highly industrialised countries in central Europe and Scandinavia.
Table of Contents
'Preface; 1. Introduction Harold James; 2. Political disputes about the role of banks Gerald D. Feldman; 3. Universal banking in interwar Central Europe Fritz Weber; 4. Comparing the interwar banking history of five small countries in north-west Europe Ulf Olsson; 5. American bankers and Britain\'s fall from gold Diane B. Kunz; 6. Banks and the problem of capital shortage in Germany, 1918-1923 Gerald D. Feldman; 7. State, banks and industry in Sweden, with some reference to the Scandinavian countries Mats Larsson; 8. State, banks and industry in Belgium and The Netherlands, 1919-1939 Guy Vanthemsche; 9. Investment behaviour of industrial joint-stock companies and industrial shareholding by the Österreichische Credit-Anstalt: inducement or obstacle to renewal and change in industry in interwar Austria Alois Mosser and Alice Teichova; 10. Financing of Hungarian industry by the Commercial Bank of Pest: a case study Elizabeth A. Boross; 11. The rise and fall of German-inspired mixed banking in Italy, 1894-1936 Douglas J. Forsyth; 12. Banking and economic development in interwar Greece Mark Mazower; 13. Why Canadian banks did not collapse in the 1930s Ian M. Drummond; 14. Japanese banks and national economic policy, 1920-1936 W. Miles Fletcher III; Index.\n
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