Universal Banking in the Twentieth Century

Universal Banking in the Twentieth Century
Author: Alice Teichova
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1994
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

This volume addresses aspects of banking in 20th-century European market economies. It examines the historical role of banks in using domestic and foreign financial resources, showing how from the 1880s onwards, banks became an integral part of the capital market in continental Europe. The study analyzes the relationship between banks and industry, and the impacts on inflation and the crisis-prone interwar period.

Rebuilding the Financial System in Central and Eastern Europe, 1918–1994

Rebuilding the Financial System in Central and Eastern Europe, 1918–1994
Author: Philip L. Cottrell
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2017-03-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 1351906224

This collection of essays, written by former bankers, practising central bankers, government advisers and historians, celebrates the seventieth anniversary of the National Bank of Hungary. From a range of view points, the contributions consider the monetary and financial history of the past century and, in particular, explore possible parallelisms between experiences of the collapse of the Habsburg Monarchy in 1918 and of contemporary changes since 1989. The first part, comprising four essays, concentrates upon central banking, especially the development of the National Bank of Hungary since 1878 and the establishment of the Bank of Poland. Commercial banking is the theme of Part II, where continuities and discontinuities are considered with respect to Austria, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Slovenia and Yugoslavia.

The Oxford Handbook of Banking

The Oxford Handbook of Banking
Author: Allen N. Berger
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 1033
Release: 2010
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0199236615

This handbook provides an overview and analysis of state-of-the-art research in banking written by researchers in the field. It includes abstract theory, empirical analysis, and practitioner and policy-related material.

The Oxford Handbook of Banking and Financial History

The Oxford Handbook of Banking and Financial History
Author: Youssef Cassis
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 561
Release: 2016
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0199658625

The financial crisis of 2008 aroused widespread interest in banking and financial history. In an attempt to better understand the magnitude of the shock, there was a demand for historical parallels. This volume provides the material for such a reflection by presenting the state of the art in banking and financial history. Contributions to this volume analyse banking and financial history in a long-term comparative perspective. Lessons drawn from these analyses may well help future generations of policy makers avoid a repeat of the financial turbulence that erupted in 2008.

The Oxford Handbook of Banking, Second Edition

The Oxford Handbook of Banking, Second Edition
Author: Allen N. Berger
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 1105
Release: 2014-11-27
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0191002194

The Oxford Handbook of Banking, Second Edition provides an overview and analysis of developments and research in banking written by leading researchers in the field. This handbook will appeal to graduate students of economics, banking and finance, academics, practitioners, regulators, and policy makers. Consequently, the book strikes a balance between abstract theory, empirical analysis, and practitioner, and policy-related material. The Handbook is split into five parts. Part I, The Theory of Banking, examines the role of banks in the wider financial system, why banks exist, how they function, and their corporate governance and risk management practices. Part II deals with Bank Operations and Performance. A range of issues are covered including bank performance, financial innovation, and technological change. Aspects relating to small business, consumer, and mortgage lending are analysed together with securitization, shadow banking, and payment systems. Part III entitled Regulatory and Policy Perspectives discusses central banking, monetary policy transmission, market discipline, and prudential regulation and supervision. Part IV of the book covers various Macroeconomic Perspectives in Banking. This part includes a discussion of systemic risk and banking and sovereign crises, the role of the state in finance and development as well as how banks influence real economic activity. The final Part V examines International Differences in Banking Structures and Environments. This part of the Handbook examines banking systems in the United States, European Union, Japan, Africa, Transition countries, and the developing nations of Asia and Latin America.

Finance and the Making of the Modern Capitalist World, 1750-1931

Finance and the Making of the Modern Capitalist World, 1750-1931
Author: Clara Eugenia Núñez
Publisher: Universidad de Sevilla
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1998
Genre: Capitalism
ISBN: 9788447204465

Recoge: Finanzas y crecimiento económico; Bancos universales en Europa; Sistemas financieros angloamericanos; Instituciones financieras regionales; Problemas en el estudio de las crisis bancarias; Aspectos sociales de las finanzas; Historia financiera.

Universal Banking

Universal Banking
Author: Anthony Saunders
Publisher: Irwin Professional Publishing
Total Pages: 808
Release: 1996
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

"Universal Banking: Financial System Design Reconsidered is the product of a conference held under the auspices of the New York University Salomon Center in February 1995. The conference was based upon the work of academic observers of the banking industry in the United States, Europe, and Japan."--BOOK JACKET.

The Corporation and the Twentieth Century

The Corporation and the Twentieth Century
Author: Richard N. Langlois
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 816
Release: 2023-06-27
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 069124698X

"Over the course of most of the twentieth century, new technologies drove increasing diversification and specialization within the economy. Du Pont, for example, which invented nylon during the Depression, managed the complexity of widespread diversification by pioneering the decentralized multidivisional organizational structure, which was almost universally adopted in large American firms after World War II. Whereas in the nineteenth century there had been just a handful of employees at their Wilmington headquarters, by 1972 there were perhaps 10,000 managers inhabiting a vast complex at the same location. The conventional wisdom is that this huge trend withdrew large swaths of the American economy from the realm of the free market and entrusted them to a new class of professional managers who had at their disposal increasingly powerful scientific methods of accounting and forecasting. It was the superior ministrations of these managers, apparently, not relative prices, that equilibrated supply and demand and made sure that goods flowed smoothly from raw materials to the final consumer. Economic historian Richard Langlois argues that it wasn't so simple. The Corporation and the Twentieth Century is an accessible account of American business enterprise and administrative planning, looking at both the rise and demise of managerial coordination, and the history of antitrust policy in this context. Offering an authoritative counterpoint to Alfred Chandler's classic The Visible Hand, Langlois shows how historic events in the twentieth century came together to drastically change the organization of American businesses. Contrary to the beliefs of some business historians, he maintains that large managerial corporations arose not because of their superiority, but as a result of systematic technological changes and larger historic forces, and that post-war events such as the Vietnam War and the fall of Bretton Woods culminated in the resurgence of market coordination, in the institutional innovations of deregulation, and in the creation of decentralized new technology. Controversially, Langlois argues that those antitrust policies viewed as successes in the past are in fact failures, and holds that there was never a period during which antitrust kept size, concentration or monopoly at bay"--

Commercial Banks and Industrial Finance in England and Wales, 1860-1913

Commercial Banks and Industrial Finance in England and Wales, 1860-1913
Author: Michael Collins
Publisher:
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2003
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780199249862

In the decades before 1914, the City of London was the premier international financial centre. However, this position was not long maintained, other industrial nations quickly and effectively challenged the influence of Britain, and following the disruption of the world markets caused by WorldWar I and the Great Depression of the 1930s, international hegemony slipped away for ever.The relationship of bankers and industrialists has often been cited as a key factor in this decline. Critics of the banks claim that, even before World War I, there were serious deficiencies in the financial provision provided by banks to the domestic industrial sector, and that these deficiencieshandicapped Britain's competitive advantage in world markets, leading to the decline of their influence and power.This book examines these claims, and bringing to bear important new data that presents the debate in a novel and revealing framework, expounds an economic rationale for historical bank behaviour. Using a rich source of contemporary records, it presents a series of micro-economic studies intocommercial bank assets and liabilities, financial crises, bank mergers, the professionalization of banking, the organization and conduct of the industrial loan business, and the nature of bank support given to industrial clients.The result is a new, authoritative interpretation of bank-industry relations in the half-century before World War I.