International Government Finance and the Amsterdam Capital Market, 1740–1815

Paperback Engels 2009 9780521101103
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During the eighteenth century European governments began systematically using an international credit structure whose centre was the Amsterdam capital market. This book reconstructs that system and surveys its principal effects on the European and especially the Dutch economies. Eighteenth-century states borrowed chiefly to finance wars and, increasingly toward the century's end, debts from earlier wars. Military and naval spending and debt service together consumed up to eighty percent of peacetime revenues and more in war. Borrowing on international markets stabilised previously disruptive deficit financing techniques and moderated the economic consequences of sharply irregular war spending. This development however, eased the problems of war-making more than it developed national economies or enhanced prosperity. The Dutch, heretofore seen as having squandered the advantage of cheap credit, actually faced the difficult problem of finding productive uses for their savings at satisfactory returns.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780521101103
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:Paperback
Aantal pagina's:380

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Inhoudsopgave

1. Introduction; 2. The Amsterdam capital market; 3. Public credit in the Dutch Republic; 4. Supply and demand patterns; 5. International government finance; 6. The debtor states: I; 7. The debtor states: II; 8. The collapse of solvency; 9. Economic consequences of lending to foreign governments; Notes; Index.

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        International Government Finance and the Amsterdam Capital Market, 1740–1815