The rise of financial capitalism : international capital markets in the age of reason

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Bibliographic Information

The rise of financial capitalism : international capital markets in the age of reason

Larry Neal

(Studies in monetary and financial history)

Cambridge University Press, 1990

Available at  / 44 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 259-270

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This work establishes the existence of a sophisticated and smoothly functioning system of financial markets in the mercantile states of northwestern Europe throughout the 1700s. Based on computer analysis of thousands of price quotes from the financial press of the eighteenth century, the results should force both historians and economists to re-evaluate their understanding of the evolution of financial markets and their importance for the economic developments of that era.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Historical background for the rise of financial capitalism: commercial revolution, rise of nation states, and capital markets
  • 2. The development of an information network and the international capital markets of London and Amsterdam
  • 3. The early capital markets of London and Amsterdam
  • 4. The Banque Royale and the South Sea Company: how the bubbles began
  • 4. Appendix: were the Mississippi and south sea bubbles rational? 5. The Bank of England and the South Sea Company: how the bubbles ended
  • 6. The English and Dutch East India Companies: how the west was won
  • 7. The integration of the English and Dutch capital markets in peace and war
  • 8. The English and Dutch capital markets in panics
  • 9. The capital markets during revolutions, war and peace
  • 10. A tale of two revolutions: international capital flows 1792-1819
  • 11. The London and Amsterdam stock markets, 1800-1825.

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