European University Institute Library

States and the masters of capital, sovereign lending, old and new, Quentin Bruneau

Label
States and the masters of capital, sovereign lending, old and new, Quentin Bruneau
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
States and the masters of capital
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1337565044
Responsibility statement
Quentin Bruneau
Series statement
Columbia studies in international order and politics
Sub title
sovereign lending, old and new
Summary
"The image of profit-seeking banks continually evaluating the creditworthiness of the states to whom they lend capital is a familiar one, frequently assumed to be as true now as it was three hundred years ago. Against this view, Sovereigns and the Masters of Capital argues that this description only corresponds to the last forty years, at best. The systematic assessment of sovereign borrowers with quantifiable data by exclusively profit-driven banks began in the early twentieth century among a restricted group of financiers. But it took until the 1970s, at the earliest, for this new approach to become dominant among lenders. Throughout the nineteenth century and until the interwar period, old merchant banking families dominated the business of sovereign lending--the practice of lending capital to sovereigns--pursuing both profit and status, and relying on personal relations rather than on statistical information, even as it became widespread and easily accessible. This only began to change with the rise of joint-stock banks, exclusively profit-driven lenders that lacked merchant bankers' connections and relied heavily on rankings based on statistical data to assess sovereign borrowers. By identifying and explaining this profound shift in terms of who sovereign lenders have been and how they have thought about the sovereigns to whom they lend capital, this book sheds new light on the peculiarity of our own time and provides a novel interpretation of the changing relationship between states and financial markets over the last two centuries"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
How international practitioners think about states -- The insiders : merchant bankers -- Gentility as a form of knowledge -- The outsiders : joint stock banks -- Statistics as a form of knowledge -- The new sovereign lending triumphs
Content
Mapped to